The Guyana Government anticipates that its model Gas-to-Energy (GtE) Project could earn the country as much as US$500 million from savings when electricity prices are slashed by half and from the sale of the rich excess gas.
This is according to Vice President Dr Bharrat Jagdeo, during a press conference on Thursday.
Located at Wales, West Bank Demerara (WBD), the GtE Project includes the construction of an Integrated Natural Gas Liquid (NGL) plant and a 300-megawatt (MW) combined cycle power plant utilising the rich natural gas from the offshore operations in the prolific Stabroek Block.
When the power plant becomes operational, which is slated for early 2025, it is expected that the addition of 300MW into the national grid will not only bring stable power but also cut the current high cost of electricity by half.
According to VP Jagdeo, this reduction would see savings to the tune of US$250 million per year.
“That is simply because we’ll reduce electricity prices from 22 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh) to 11 cents per kWh. So, US$250 million per year in savings to the people of Guyana,” he stated.

The Vice President further explained that with this saving, it would take Guyana approximately eight years to repay for the entire GtE Project, which is pegged at almost US$2 billion including the cost of the US$1 billion pipelines installed by US oil major and Stabroek Block operator, ExxonMobil, that will be used to bring the gas onshore.
However, Jagdeo pointed out that the liquids that will come when Guyana cleans the excess gas for products such as cooking gas or Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) can be sold and this will further bolster the country’s earnings from the GtE Project.
“The liquids alone that we will get from the project, if we sell it at current market price in Guyana, the same amount of liquid will raise another US$250 million per year…. So, it’s a massive [earning]. We will see about US$250 to US$500 million per year in benefits from that because we now have free electricity [and liquids to sell]. That’s a huge sum of money,” the VP stressed.
At least 50 million standard cubic feet of gas (mmscf) are expected to be piped from the Liza Field in the Stabroek Block to the GtE Project site at Wales.
In the Stabroek Block, some 17 trillion cubic feet of gas has already been found with the Pluma and Haimara wells being proven gas fields.
But the 250 kilometres of 12-inch pipelines that were laid by Exxon to bring the gas onshore will only use 40 per cent of the pipeline’s capacity to gas up the Wales project, bringing 50 million standard cubic feet per day (mmscfd) of dry gas onshore.










