GUYANA-Government says it will not take up Trinidad-s offer to refine crude oil.

0
959

GEORGETOWN, Guyana, CMC – Guyana Wednesday said it is prepared to build its refinery less than 24 hours after Trinidad and Tobago said it is prepared to assist Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries further developing their oil and gas industries.

Port of Spain had also said it had taken a deliberate policy to engage its regional neighbors in developing economic cooperation in the energy sector.

Prime Minister Dr. Keith Rowley, addressing the opening of Guyana’s International Energy Conference and Expo, told more than 1,200 delegates that crude oil, which was once seen as being at the margins of the region, has become a focal point with significant discoveries in Guyana, Suriname, French Guyana, Belize, and Trinidad and Tobago.

“In today’s economic environment, however, investments in enabling infrastructure and technology can be costly, even prohibitive. Trinidad and Tobago has the energy infrastructure to monetize hydrocarbon resources produced by its Caribbean neighbors.”

Rowley said Trinidad and Tobago possesses ten ammonia plants, seven methanol plants, four LNG plants, and an iron and steel complex which, at peak performance, utilized as feedstock four bcf of natural gas. This oil refinery processes up to 140,000 barrels of oil per day.

He said Trinidad and Tobago’s current natural gas production averages 2.8 bcf per day, and the country is still exploring the market for a user for the oil refinery.

“Trinidad and Tobago, therefore, provides a viable option for those countries that wish to optimize the monetization of their hydrocarbon resources without incurring substantial capital expenditure,” he added.

But Natural Resources Minister, Vickram Bharrat, said the Irfaan Ali administration is keen on building its refinery.

“We’re looking to build our refinery in the country,” he told reporters, adding, “we are trying to ensure that we are self-sufficient in terms of energy, so that’s why we are moving towards setting up the refinery in the country.”

Bharrat told the pro-government News Room publication that the government has already issued a Request for Proposals for a privately-owned 30,000-barrel-per-day oil refinery in East Berbice- Corentyne and that the administration would soon be deciding on the nine proposals received.

Bharrat said Guyana currently needs about 15,000 barrels of oil per day, and with growing energy demand, it is believed that this 30,000-barrel-per-day refinery will suffice.

Bharrat said Guyana is keen on advancing natural gas cooperation with Trinidad and Tobago and Suriname to monetize that resource.

“Trinidad has the experience and the expertise as well, too, and quite honestly, we haven’t been focusing too much on gas.

“We have spent a lot of our time on oil, rightly so, because of the price of oil (but) because of the way the world is going, the oil demand might not be long lasting, but gas is seen as a transitional fuel,” Bharrat added.

Meanwhile, in his address to the conference on Wednesday, Bharrat told delegates that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is establishing a system for real-time monitoring of the country’s forests similar to how the government currently monitors oil and gas activities offshore.

He said the EPA initiative would complement the work done by the Guyana Geology and Mines Commission (GGMC) and the Guyana Forestry Commission (GFC).

“The GFC and the GGMC combined, we have over 50 stations in the interior, crewed by forest and mining officers. Added to that, we have the compliance department and over 50 wardens. And they have two stations. In total, we have over 500 officers at different interior locations where heavy mining and forestry activities are concentrated.”

Bharrat said Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo would have mentioned the monitoring, reporting, and verification system (MRVS), saying it “has been helping us to monitor our forest coverage.

“The EPA has a new system that will come on board very soon. We’ve already started it offshore Guyana, but we’ll start using it in our forests too,” Bharrat said, noting that even now, the government can monitor offshore oil and gas activities remotely.

“We’re shifting it to our forests and mining activities, besides from our capabilities on the ground. Because at some point, we have to move towards the use of technology. We haven’t been doing that too much.

“In forestry, it’s easy to monitor forest activities. I often say to loggers and anyone who asks the question, it’s not every day you will see a man with a log on his back running around or trying to hide from us,” Bharrat told the conference.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here