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FM
Former Member

Foul air and bad water

Sep 07, 2020 Dem Boys Seh, Features / Columnists, News 0, Source - Kaieteur News Online - https://www.kaieteurnewsonline...l-air-and-bad-water/

Last week was a bad week fuh ExxonMobil. De company facing some serious backlash from around dem country in which it gat investments.

De company gat big investments in Papau New Guinea (PNG). Dat is a country of nine million people and despite all de oil it gat, de people still piss poor.

De Prime Minister wah come in last year seh enough is enough. He decide dat is he gat to get a better deal from dem investors wah carrying away he country wealth.

De man serious. He seh dat de country gat to get a bigger share of de revenue. Dat is type of talk dem boys wan hear from we leaders hay.
ExxonMobil also gat big investments in Australia.

It announce dat it cutting jobs all over de world, including in Australia. But dem boys know dat is because it wan concentrate on we oil hay in Guyana. Dat is why Exxon downsizing dem operations elsewhere. Dem boys seh nah bother with dem jobs cuts, Guyana oil sweet.

Meanwhile, de pressure mounting in Guyana fuh Exxon fuh stop flaring gas offshore. De Waterfall paper point out last week how all dis flaring wah bin tekkin place was in contravention of de Green State Development Strategy.

Bharrat bin have something called de Low Carbon Development Strategy. Dat too is against de flaring of gas. So dem boys wan know wah de PPP/C gan do about Exxon and all this foul smell wah dem emitting into we air and all de bad water wah dem loosing into de ocean weh we fisherman does ketch fish.

Talk half and wait fuh Exxon threaten fuh cut jobs in Guyana.

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Papua New Guinea demands 65% from Exxon in new deal

โ€“  Also calls for increased local content   

Sep 07, 2020 News 0, Source - Kaieteur News Online - https://www.kaieteurnewsonline...m-exxon-in-new-deal/

Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea, James Marape recently renewed calls for a better gas deal with ExxonMobil, demanding a bump up from 40 percent in existing deals to 60 percent for newer projects.

https://www.kaieteurnewsonline.com/images/2020/09/James-Marape-300x249.jpg

Papua New Guinea Prime Minister, James Marape

The PM, who gained popularity for condemning unfair exploitation by extractive companies, decried the lopsided deals the poverty-stricken nation had signed with several foreign companies. He also committed to demanding that developers show an increased commitment to local content by cleaving to local labour, goods and services wherever possible.

Marapeโ€™s calls come months after talks broke down due to Exxonโ€™s resistance to offering the state fairer terms on the intended Pโ€™nyang gas project.

The oil major heads joint ventures in the country for the development of onshore Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) fields, which started in 2014.

One former Australia senator, Scott Ludlam several years ago criticized the current Exxon-led operations as โ€œeconomic parasitismโ€.

A 2018 report by the Jubilee Australia Research Centre titled โ€œDouble or Nothing: The Broken Economic Promises of PNG LNGโ€ reveals how the results the LNG project produced for the State fell way below expectations, with one author positing that the country would have been better off if the project didnโ€™t happen at all.

Marape said on Wednesday that the country has been โ€œunfairly held to ransomโ€ by Exxon and its partners, and told the Parliament his administration would forge ahead with plans to increase the stateโ€™s take.

โ€œWe are on the right course and the journey that we are taking will not be easy,โ€ Marape said. โ€œBut we must remain united and resilient in this course, because PNG will be a winner in all aspects.โ€

According to Bloomberg, Marape told the Parliament that Exxon Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods understood the governmentโ€™s position on Pโ€™nyang, and would respond following consultations with the joint-venture partners.

โ€œI am hopeful that both parties can find a mutually acceptable pathway when we re-engage, as a no-deal would have far reaching consequences for both parties,โ€ Marape said.

PNG has had to learn fast about the modus operandi of oil, gas and mining multinationals. Its experience with Exxon gave it ample opportunity, when the PNG public was wowed with promises of great wealth and economic growth for the populace. However, the people soon realized that the promises did not come to fruition. This time around, the country is being told that the new $13B venture would double its gas exports in just a few years. But PNG looked at what its Southeast Asian neighbours got from Exxon and companies, and found that it received a share far lower than the other countries.

โ€œWe are happy to wait for a few weeks, months, years.โ€ Energy Minister, Kerenga Kua had told ABC Australia in February. โ€œIf it happens, it happens. But itโ€™s going to be on our terms.โ€

Guyana struggles with a similar issue now, wherein ExxonMobil and its surrogates continue to purport that production under the current 2016 Stabroek Block deal will revolutionise Guyanaโ€™s economy. However, Kaieteur Newsโ€™ extensive coverage of this sector over the years has found the deal to be rife with provisions that shackle the governmentโ€™s regulatory capacity and the governmentโ€™s share to an industry low, despite the world-class quality of oil in Exxonโ€™s discoveries.

President of the Center for International Environmental Law, Carrol Muffett has said that Guyana is the last growth story for Exxon to sell to its investors because the deal is so fundamentally unfair that it amounts to Guyana giving away free oil to Exxon.

FM
@Former Member posted:

Papua New Guinea demands 65% from Exxon in new deal

โ€“  Also calls for increased local content   

Sep 07, 2020 News 0, Source - Kaieteur News Online - https://www.kaieteurnewsonline...m-exxon-in-new-deal/

Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea, James Marape recently renewed calls for a better gas deal with ExxonMobil, demanding a bump up from 40 percent in existing deals to 60 percent for newer projects.

https://www.kaieteurnewsonline.com/images/2020/09/James-Marape-300x249.jpg

Papua New Guinea Prime Minister, James Marape

The PM, who gained popularity for condemning unfair exploitation by extractive companies, decried the lopsided deals the poverty-stricken nation had signed with several foreign companies. He also committed to demanding that developers show an increased commitment to local content by cleaving to local labour, goods and services wherever possible.

Marapeโ€™s calls come months after talks broke down due to Exxonโ€™s resistance to offering the state fairer terms on the intended Pโ€™nyang gas project.

The oil major heads joint ventures in the country for the development of onshore Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) fields, which started in 2014.

One former Australia senator, Scott Ludlam several years ago criticized the current Exxon-led operations as โ€œeconomic parasitismโ€.

A 2018 report by the Jubilee Australia Research Centre titled โ€œDouble or Nothing: The Broken Economic Promises of PNG LNGโ€ reveals how the results the LNG project produced for the State fell way below expectations, with one author positing that the country would have been better off if the project didnโ€™t happen at all.

Marape said on Wednesday that the country has been โ€œunfairly held to ransomโ€ by Exxon and its partners, and told the Parliament his administration would forge ahead with plans to increase the stateโ€™s take.

โ€œWe are on the right course and the journey that we are taking will not be easy,โ€ Marape said. โ€œBut we must remain united and resilient in this course, because PNG will be a winner in all aspects.โ€

According to Bloomberg, Marape told the Parliament that Exxon Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods understood the governmentโ€™s position on Pโ€™nyang, and would respond following consultations with the joint-venture partners.

โ€œI am hopeful that both parties can find a mutually acceptable pathway when we re-engage, as a no-deal would have far reaching consequences for both parties,โ€ Marape said.

PNG has had to learn fast about the modus operandi of oil, gas and mining multinationals. Its experience with Exxon gave it ample opportunity, when the PNG public was wowed with promises of great wealth and economic growth for the populace. However, the people soon realized that the promises did not come to fruition. This time around, the country is being told that the new $13B venture would double its gas exports in just a few years. But PNG looked at what its Southeast Asian neighbours got from Exxon and companies, and found that it received a share far lower than the other countries.

โ€œWe are happy to wait for a few weeks, months, years.โ€ Energy Minister, Kerenga Kua had told ABC Australia in February. โ€œIf it happens, it happens. But itโ€™s going to be on our terms.โ€

Guyana struggles with a similar issue now, wherein ExxonMobil and its surrogates continue to purport that production under the current 2016 Stabroek Block deal will revolutionise Guyanaโ€™s economy. However, Kaieteur Newsโ€™ extensive coverage of this sector over the years has found the deal to be rife with provisions that shackle the governmentโ€™s regulatory capacity and the governmentโ€™s share to an industry low, despite the world-class quality of oil in Exxonโ€™s discoveries.

President of the Center for International Environmental Law, Carrol Muffett has said that Guyana is the last growth story for Exxon to sell to its investors because the deal is so fundamentally unfair that it amounts to Guyana giving away free oil to Exxon.

The man "don tief all de money, so he want mo".

R

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