Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Black gold' for Guyana and Suriname, a blessing or curse?

EUR -
AED 4.048549
AFN 75.807487
ALL 98.742523
AMD 426.921756
ANG 1.988036
AOA 1020.683844
ARS 1071.111419
AUD 1.61163
AWG 1.98405
AZN 1.87367
BAM 1.953638
BBD 2.227256
BDT 131.814134
BGN 1.955172
BHD 0.415572
BIF 3200.1458
BMD 1.10225
BND 1.430656
BOB 7.622461
BRL 6.037683
BSD 1.103089
BTN 92.603564
BWP 14.591118
BYN 3.609938
BYR 21604.10478
BZD 2.22346
CAD 1.494833
CDF 3163.457983
CHF 0.939553
CLF 0.036463
CLP 1006.124001
CNY 7.769873
CNH 7.784168
COP 4614.967456
CRC 571.872351
CUC 1.10225
CUP 29.209631
CVE 110.141618
CZK 25.36157
DJF 196.434407
DKK 7.459291
DOP 66.327204
DZD 146.510747
EGP 53.292257
ERN 16.533754
ETB 133.306991
FJD 2.427925
FKP 0.839429
GBP 0.837876
GEL 3.009035
GGP 0.839429
GHS 17.472427
GIP 0.839429
GMD 76.055118
GNF 9523.547591
GTQ 8.532442
GYD 230.771487
HKD 8.559717
HNL 27.521794
HRK 7.494212
HTG 145.551573
HUF 401.715376
IDR 17106.923785
ILS 4.209571
IMP 0.839429
INR 92.544986
IQD 1445.000954
IRR 46390.949806
ISK 149.300013
JEP 0.839429
JMD 174.128888
JOD 0.78106
JPY 161.337452
KES 142.190275
KGS 93.096332
KHR 4477.08625
KMF 492.136649
KPW 992.024595
KRW 1476.871593
KWD 0.337245
KYD 0.919283
KZT 532.440798
LAK 24357.04636
LBP 98780.485148
LKR 324.191248
LRD 220.612866
LSL 19.287756
LTL 3.254659
LVL 0.66674
LYD 5.245243
MAD 10.775429
MDL 19.303813
MGA 5005.551653
MKD 61.61725
MMK 3580.065796
MNT 3745.446279
MOP 8.824735
MRU 43.577173
MUR 51.243893
MVR 16.930703
MWK 1912.718081
MXN 21.372798
MYR 4.649297
MZN 70.406232
NAD 19.287756
NGN 1827.078732
NIO 40.596181
NOK 11.693585
NPR 148.169379
NZD 1.777472
OMR 0.424406
PAB 1.103079
PEN 4.108953
PGK 4.39122
PHP 62.138225
PKR 306.272035
PLN 4.31311
PYG 8600.5606
QAR 4.020596
RON 4.976992
RSD 117.023758
RUB 104.602115
RWF 1494.573216
SAR 4.139507
SBD 9.193632
SCR 15.013437
SDG 663.023658
SEK 11.348779
SGD 1.429176
SHP 0.839429
SLE 25.183445
SLL 23113.630821
SOS 630.408106
SRD 33.955363
STD 22814.354614
SVC 9.652319
SYP 2769.436735
SZL 19.279016
THB 36.407268
TJS 11.736453
TMT 3.857876
TND 3.378715
TOP 2.581577
TRY 37.757968
TTD 7.481721
TWD 35.333511
TZS 3005.425288
UAH 45.430651
UGX 4040.473805
USD 1.10225
UYU 46.208237
UZS 14072.427375
VEF 3992959.414523
VES 40.716573
VND 27305.494166
VUV 130.861363
WST 3.083504
XAF 655.243793
XAG 0.034423
XAU 0.000414
XCD 2.978887
XDR 0.814114
XOF 655.237855
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.94847
ZAR 19.258461
ZMK 9921.571006
ZMW 29.094068
ZWL 354.924129
  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.74

    -0.16%

  • RBGPF

    58.9300

    58.93

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.2500

    12.62

    -1.98%

  • AZN

    -1.6500

    77.93

    -2.12%

  • NGG

    -1.8100

    66.97

    -2.7%

  • GSK

    -1.0800

    38.37

    -2.81%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.89

    -0.16%

  • RELX

    -0.6800

    46.61

    -1.46%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    6.98

    +1.15%

  • RIO

    -0.9900

    69.83

    -1.42%

  • BTI

    -0.8600

    35.11

    -2.45%

  • BCC

    -1.2400

    138.29

    -0.9%

  • BCE

    -0.6000

    33.84

    -1.77%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.3

    -0.6%

  • BP

    0.0900

    32.46

    +0.28%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    9.69

    -0.52%

'Black gold' for Guyana and Suriname, a blessing or curse?
'Black gold' for Guyana and Suriname, a blessing or curse? / Photo: Patrick FORT - AFP

'Black gold' for Guyana and Suriname, a blessing or curse?

Emerging as potential oil powers while the world seeks to wean itself off planet-warming fossil fuels, poverty-stricken South American neighbors Guyana and Suriname say they have to cash in while they can.

Text size:

The former Dutch colonies are among the world's most tree-covered countries, hosts to the so-called forest "lungs" that sequester massive amounts of planet-warming carbon dioxide.

Their economies and populations small, the countries have traditionally emitted little CO2 or other greenhouse gasses from fossil fuel use -- in fact Suriname is one of only three carbon-negative countries in the world and Guyana claims carbon neutrality.

But some fear this could change with the recent discovery of rich offshore oil deposits in an area known as the Guyana-Suriname Basin.

Guyana, a country of 800,000 people, was recently found to have proven reserves of at least 10 billion barrels of oil, likely much more according to experts.

This makes it the country with the highest reserves per capita in the world -- which consumes 99.4 million barrels of oil per day.

Early assessments suggest the reserves of Suriname, a country of 600,000 people, may not be far behind.

"It will be hard to remain carbon neutral as a country (involved in the) petroleum sector," economist Steven Debipersad of the Anton de Kom University in Suriname's capital Paramaribo, told AFP.

The projected $10 billion Suriname stands to make in the next 10 to 20 years, will likely bring economic growth at the cost of the environment, he said.

The country's GDP today is about $3 billion.

- Hungry 'every day' -

Their presidents insist Guyana and Suriname cannot be expected to turn their backs on a chance to fill their countries' coffers and raise the quality of life for their people.

The countries are among the poorest in South America, with vast swathes of their populations living without electricity, clean water or access to adequate health services.

In a Paramaribo ghetto named Texas, dirty sewer water flows among dilapidated wooden homes.

Resident Edison Poekitie, a 23-year-old musician, scrapes by on no more than $50 a week. Does he go hungry?

"Every day!" he told AFP. "It's hard out here, really hard."

The community, he added, needs "water pipes, cables, new roads without potholes, schools, better houses, playgrounds..."

Poekitie said he hoped the government would spend the oil money "wisely," a sentiment echoed by 45-year-old food truck owner Brian Braithwaite in a poor neighborhood of the Guyanese capital Georgetown.

"Hopefully they do something so that... people (who) live on the street can do better," Braithwaite said.

- 'Oil curse' -

Both presidents have vowed to make judicious use of their windfall petroleum profits, though some are worried that will undercut the sovereign wealth funds set up to guard some money for future generations.

"We are quite aware of the oil curse," Suriname President Chan Santokhi told AFP, alluding to neighbor Venezuela and other resource-rich countries such as Angola and Algeria that were unable to turn oil wealth into social and economic progress.

"We... should also get the opportunity to benefit from the production of oil and gas and its income" to address a biting economic crisis "and help our people to have better lives," he insisted.

For his part, Guyanese President Mohamed Irfaan Ali wants to use the oil income to "create wealth for now, and future generations."

Both speak of using the money to diversify their economies with investments in agriculture, tourism, housing, education and health care.

Eventually, "the oil and gas will be gone, but the food security should be guaranteed," said Santokhi.

- Oil money for green energy -

Oil extraction and refining are major contributors to greenhouse gas emissions.

Though they have historically emitted little, Suriname and Guyana are both deeply affected by global warming -- in the crosshairs of worsening tropical storms and of flooding from rising sea levels.

Presidents Santokhi and Irfaan Ali believe they can maintain their countries' carbon balances by using oil money to protect their forests and invest in green energy.

Defending the forests that cover about 87 percent of Guyana and 93 percent of Suriname is also economically sage: both countries can sell so-called carbon credits to polluters who need to offset emissions.

For Guyana, carbon credits are worth about $190 million per year, said Irfaan Ali.

Monique Pool, director of the Green Heritage Fund of Suriname, is not convinced by the two-pronged approach.

"Carbon credit will give us more money faster than oil and gas and for longer because it will be sustainable," she told AFP.

In Georgetown, activist Christopher Ram agreed the oil should be left in the ground, expressing fear of exploitation by ruthless companies in the absence of "good governance."

Instead, "I would go to the international community and say: 'We are a small country, we've always been good to the environment, we want to stay that way... help us get the benefits we would have got with oil'."

But 53-year-old Cynthia Neel, who sent her daughter from Suriname to the Netherlands at the age of six for education and a chance at a better life, is hopeful of positive change.

"I hope that with the oil the children will no longer have to leave," she told AFP.

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)