May 23 (Reuters) - An Exxon Mobil-led oil consortium may
need to decide by October whether it will go ahead and develop a
large natural gas find off the coast of Guyana, the country's
vice president said on Thursday.
The government has been pressing for a bonanza from mostly
untapped gas reserves found by the Exxon-led group. The
consortium, which includes Hess Corp ( HES ) and CNOOC Ltd
, is required under its production agreement to return
to the government by October about 20% of its massive Stabroek
block if that area remains undeveloped.
Exxon has said it hopes to complete an appraisal of the gas
findings by early next year and is considering how to best
commercialize the natural gas. An October deadline for
relinquishing untapped gas areas may require it to make a
decision sooner.
That 20% of the undeveloped Stabroek area might include the
group's Haimara discovery, where it mostly found natural gas,
Guyana Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo said on Thursday during a
media briefing in Georgetown.
"We have had some discussions with Exxon and told them that
if they are not going to work on it, they have to relinquish.
They did some studies and said they might be able to move
forward with the project," Jagdeo said.
Exxon is in discussions with Guyana over what areas will be
relinquished and has not concluded whether the gassy areas are
among them, a company spokesperson said. The consortium's
exploration agreement runs through 2027, the spokesperson added.
Haimara, the group's 12th finding of oil and gas in the
country, was announced in 2019. Exxon has said the Haimara-1
well found approximately 207 feet (63 meters) of a high-quality,
gas-condensate bearing sandstone reservoir.
There could be up to 16 trillion cubic feet of associated
gas in Exxon's areas, Jagdeo said, citing Exxon accounts.
He had said in February that Guyana wanted another
international developer to participate in developing the gas
project. Guyana is moving ahead to select a company that could
develop the project, which it estimates will require between $10
billion and $15 billion in investment.
"We tested the market. We went out for expressions of
interest and had some really good, strong firms with good
credentials saying, 'We believe there is a viable project and we
want to work on it,'" he added, without identifying the firms.
The cabinet must approve the company selected and once
approved, that firm would be cleared to initiate talks with
Exxon over a project to monetize the gas reserves.
(Reporting by Marianna Parraga; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and
Muralikumar Anantharaman)