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Thursday, April 17, 2025

ExxonMobil has no plans to renegotiate production sharing agreement

by

188 days ago
20241010
President of ExxonMobil Guyana, Alistair Routledge

President of ExxonMobil Guyana, Alistair Routledge

The Pres­i­dent of Exxon­Mo­bil Guyana, Al­is­tair Rout­ledge, has all but ruled out a rene­go­ti­a­tion of the Pro­duc­tion Shar­ing Agree­ment (PSA) be­cause it would ad­verse­ly im­pact the com­pa­ny’s planned US$55 bil­lion in­vest­ment in Guyana.

“We have no in­ter­est in in­vok­ing that Ar­ti­cle. As I say, we’ve made US$55 bil­lion worth of com­mit­ment to the coun­try. To go back and to un­der­mine the ba­sis of that in­vest­ment would se­ri­ous­ly chal­lenge any fu­ture in­vest­ments,” he told a news con­fer­ence.

But he told re­porters that if the ba­sis for the in­vest­ment changes, in­clud­ing at least an in­crease in the roy­al­ty from two to five per cent, it would un­der­mine its ba­sis if the orig­i­nal num­bers change.

“If we start to have un­cer­tain­ty around the ba­sis for the in­vest­ment, not just the ge­o­log­ic risk, the ex­e­cu­tion risk, then it se­ri­ous­ly starts to un­der­mine that in­vest­ment the­sis,” he said.

Rout­ledge spoke about the is­sue af­ter the Op­po­si­tion Leader,  Aubrey Nor­ton, out­lined his  20-point plan for the hy­dro­car­bon sec­tor should the main op­po­si­tion Peo­ple’s Na­tion­al Con­gress Re­forms (PN­CR) win the 2025 gen­er­al elec­tions.

Nor­ton said that the plan in­cludes in­vok­ing Ar­ti­cle 32.1 of the PSA that states the com­pa­ny must give per­mis­sion for any of sev­er­al things, in­clud­ing rene­go­ti­a­tion, to be done with the PSA.

“Ex­cept as may be ex­press­ly pro­vid­ed here­in, the Gov­ern­ment shall not amend, mod­i­fy, re­scind, ter­mi­nate, de­clare in­valid or un­en­force­able, re­quire rene­go­ti­a­tion of, com­pel re­place­ment or sub­sti­tu­tion, or oth­er­wise seek to avoid, al­ter, or lim­it this Agree­ment with­out the pri­or writ­ten con­sent of Con­trac­tor.”

Asked whether he be­lieved that Guyana was en­ti­tled to more of the rev­enues now that Guyana-Suri­name Basin has been de-risked, Rout­ledge said in­vest­ments and rev­enues were hinged on the ex­ist­ing agree­ment cov­er­ing 30 years.

Rout­ledge told re­porters it is bet­ter to have a “fair share of a much larg­er num­ber and ul­ti­mate­ly that’s more mean­ing­ful for the coun­try” in­stead of a large share of a small­er num­ber.

Rout­ledge was al­so of the opin­ion that the coun­try’s Lo­cal Con­tent Act pro­vides a guide­line for oil and gas com­pa­nies and open the doors to nu­mer­ous op­por­tu­ni­ties for lo­cal busi­ness­es and cit­i­zens.

Passed in 2021, the leg­is­la­tion al­lows Guyanese busi­ness­es to ben­e­fit from em­ploy­ment and con­trac­tu­al op­por­tu­ni­ties that sup­ply a va­ri­ety of goods and ser­vices to the oil and gas sec­tor.

The Act de­fines 40 sub-sec­tors that in­clude trans­porta­tion, ac­com­mo­da­tion, le­gal ser­vices, mar­ket­ing, and pub­lic re­la­tions. The Act makes it manda­to­ry that a per­cent­age of these goods and ser­vices must be pro­vid­ed by Guyanese.

Rout­ledge said the leg­is­la­tion pro­vides an­oth­er av­enue for Guyanese to ben­e­fit from de­vel­op­ments in the oil and gas sec­tor.

“We recog­nise that this is Guyana’s re­source, [and] we want the peo­ple not on­ly to ben­e­fit from what we pay in roy­al­ties and prof­it share or tax­es but al­so in the de­vel­op­ment phase; we are mak­ing op­por­tu­ni­ties avail­able as quick­ly as we can for peo­ple to be em­ployed and for busi­ness­es to ben­e­fit and grow,” he said.

Rout­ledge point­ed out the Act’s use­ful­ness is en­sur­ing for­eign com­pa­nies have the op­por­tu­ni­ty through a clear frame­work to part­ner with lo­cal busi­ness­es to pro­vide a high­er lev­el of ser­vice to com­pa­nies op­er­at­ing in the oil sec­tor.

“I think where the Act has been help­ful…is for new en­trants to the coun­try be­ing clear on the ba­sis of which they are ex­pect­ed to come in and en­cour­ag­ing them to part­ner with lo­cal in­vestors and com­pa­nies. I think that has been help­ful, [giv­ing] clar­i­ty for new in­vestors in the coun­try,” Rout­ledge said.

The Lo­cal Con­tent Sec­re­tari­at man­ages the Lo­cal Con­tent Reg­is­ter, a data­base con­tain­ing the names of over 900 lo­cal com­pa­nies qual­i­fied to ben­e­fit from op­por­tu­ni­ties pro­vid­ed un­der the Act.

Rout­ledge said the agency has played a crit­i­cal role in stream­lin­ing com­mu­ni­ca­tion be­tween the Guyana gov­ern­ment and Exxon­Mo­bil.

As a re­sult of the Lo­cal Con­tent Act, lo­cal com­pa­nies have earned near­ly one bil­lion US dol­lars, with a gov­ern­ment state­ment in­di­cat­ing that by the end of the year, sev­er­al oth­er op­por­tu­ni­ties will open up in ar­eas such as trans­porta­tion, elec­tri­cal, plumb­ing and ad­min­is­tra­tive sup­port.

GEORGE­TOWN, Guyana, Oct 10, CMC

CMC/gt/or/2024


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