…says Govt has contingencies to fund US$646M project

Vice President Dr Bharrat Jagdeo has said he has no qualms about the length of time the United States Export-Import (EXIM) Bank is taking to process the US$646 million loan to fund his government’s highly-touted Gas-to-Energy (GtE) Project. He has said there are alternatives available to ensure that this transformative initiative is completed.
It was announced In April 2023 that Guyana had applied for a US$646 million loan from the US Exim Bank to finance the Gas-to-Energy Project, which includes the construction of an Integrated Natural Gas Liquid (NGL) plant and a 300-megawatt (MW) combined cycle power plant at Wales, West Bank Demerara, utilising natural gas from the country’s offshore operations in the Stabroek Block. That loan is still to be approved by the US-based financial institution more than a year later.
Asked for an update on the processing of this loan, Jagdeo told Guyana Times at a press conference on Thursday that a technical team from the US EXIM Bank was in Guyana to conduct its assessments on the project.
“They came and they did the environmental assessment on their own… So, there was an independent assessment of the entire project, including the environmental issues. And so I think (that) as soon as that report is ready, then it will go to the [US Bank’s] Board. I don’t know exactly when, but I believe maybe in a month or two,” he indicated.
The Vice President welcomed this independent assessment in light of efforts by some local persons who have joined hands with foreign non-governmental organisations to block the EXIM Bank’s funding of the project.
It was reported as recently as last week that Friends of the Earth United States, an NGO with over 16,000 members, wrote Chairman of the US EXIM Bank, Reta Jo Lewis, demanding the institution does not fund the GtE project.
VP Jagdeo has revealed that Guyana is still pursuing the project, with or without the US Bank’s loan.
“So, it’s moving forward. We’re not desperate or at a point where we have to stop this project because the loan is not coming through. And we have several alternatives too. We’re not a party or a government that doesn’t have contingencies,” he explained.










