… says 3rd phase expected to be handed over by year end

Deygoo-Boyer
The artificial island being built in the Demerara River by Vreed-en-Hoop Shorebase Incorporated (VEHSI), has been partly handed over to ExxonMobil Guyana for use as a shore base, with the consortium confirming that the remainder of the project is expected to be handed over by year-end.
Back in 2022, ExxonMobil Guyana and VEHSI signed an agreement for shore base services. The artificial island in the Demerara River that will provide these shore base services, which had a price tag of US$300 million, has so far been partly handed over.
In an update provided to the Guyana Times on Wednesday, VEHSI Director Nicholas Deygoo-Boyer revealed that two out of three phases of this project, comprising roughly 50 per cent, have been handed over to ExxonMobil.
“Two out of three phases have been handed over. It’s just that the third phase is as large as the first two… the two phases that have been handed over have two berths and 10 acres with fabrication pads behind them.”
Boyer, whose company National Hardware Limited is a part of the VEHSI consortium, further confirmed that the third phase of the US multimillion-dollar project is expected to be handed over by this year end.
“Basically, (both) phases were handed over in July. But not at the same time. One was in early July; the second one was at the end of July. The third phase, we expect to hand over in December,” Boyer explained.
