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ExxonMobil touts Guyana’s natural gas potential next

  • Market: Crude oil
  • 17/02/26

ExxonMobil said it is gearing up to help Guyana meet its natural gas production potential after spearheading the development of one of the world's biggest oil discoveries in recent decades off the coast of the South American nation.

"The oil chapter remains very strong, but the next strategic chapter, the one that can broaden the impact for Guyana, is natural gas," said Dan Ammann, the company's president of upstream today at the Guyana Energy Conference and Supply Chain Expo in Georgetown, Guyana.

ExxonMobil stands ready to respond with investment, engineering and project execution as soon as the government approves permits and unveils market frameworks, he said.

"We are committed to moving as fast as the government of Guyana in doing what it takes to monetize the resource as rapidly, safely and smartly as possible," Ammann said.

But developing gas resources is more complicated than oil, Ammann said, requiring different infrastructure from processing facilities to pipelines to power systems. Permitting and environmental reviews are also needed, as well as input from a wider range of parties such as utilities, industrial users and regulators.

"Gas succeeds when the whole upstream, midstream and downstream value chain comes together in the right sequence," Ammann said. "We're ready and we will match the pace of our partners."

ExxonMobil has already completed its first gas-to-energy pipeline, which will lower electricity costs in Guyana when it is up and running. The pipeline is waiting for the completion of an onshore power plant later this year.

And Hammerhead, the company's seventh project at the giant offshore Stabroek block, is being designed specifically with a plan to transport gas by pipeline to shore in addition to producing oil.

"We see significant recoverable gas resources, particularly in the southeast part of the Stabroek block," Ammann said. "We believe that opportunity is compelling."

Turning to Guyana's vast offshore oil riches, Ammann talked up Uaru, ExxonMobil's fifth project at Stabroek, which is expected to start up by the end of the year with a capacity of 250,000 b/d.

"That will boost Guyana's daily oil production well beyond 1mn b/d," Ammann said. A sixth project — Whiptail — is forecast to come online next year, adding a further 250,000 b/d.

"We're also continuing exploration and appraisal, particularly with Ranger-3 and Barreleye, because we believe that there's still more value to unlock," Ammann said, referring to two other offshore Guyana discoveries still being developed.

The upstream chief said Guyana remains a key part of its so-called "advantaged" portfolio of assets — including the Permian basin, LNG projects and deepwater exploration and production — which offer high-returns at low cost and reduced emissions.

"Guyana is not a side story to that portfolio, Guyana is a cornerstone to our portfolio," Ammann said. "The Stabroek block combines world-class geology with competitive development costs, repeatable project execution and an opportunity to create value at very significant scale."


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