First oil marked by obfuscation and confusion

Introduction

This column should have continued my take on Local Content. I will defer this to a later piece so that I do not miss the very focus on this series: the Road to First Oil. Readers will recall that this series which began in June 2017 was titled the Road to First Oil. That day arrived with a statement by ExxonMobil on December 20, 2019 that oil production had started from the Liza field offshore Guyana less than five years after the first find of hydrocarbons. In what was a clear sign that Guyana’s national petroleum agenda is driven by the American oil giant, Guyana’s President David Granger made a similar announcement only minutes before that by ExxonMobil which incidentally operates through a shell company incorporated in The Bahamas. 

But even before the announcement, there was again obfuscation and confusion concerning the sale of Guyana’s share of the soon-to-be-produced oil of which notification came not from the Government of Guyana but from Bloomberg, an American news agency. In recalling the falsehoods of then Oil Minister Raphael Trotman about the signing of the 2016 Petroleum Agreement and the concealment of the Signing Bonus by the Ministry of Finance, one fails to recognise any significant improvement in competence, accountability and transparency since control and management of the petroleum sector was removed from Trotman and handed to Dr. Mark Bynoe who seems to be running a one-man show. At least one thing can be said for Trotman – he is a member of Cabinet, Bynoe is not.