US$9B Payara Project is single largest investment ever made in Guyana

The US$9 billion Payara development will target an estimated resource base of about 600 million oil-equivalent barrels and is considered to be the largest single investment in the history of Guyana.

Minister Bharat and members of the ExxonMobil team signing the approved agreement on Wednesday

The project in the Stabroek Block is expected to produce up to 220,000 barrels of oil per day after start-up in 2024, using the Prosperity Floating Production, Storage And Offloading (FPSO) vessel.
Guyana is currently producing around 100,000 barrels of oil per day, but it is expected that within the next few years, production will surpass one million, making the country one of the largest oil producers in the Region.
After a tedious review process, on Wednesday, the Government of Guyana and ExxonMobil signed the licence for the Payara field offshore development in Guyana.
Payara is the third Field Development Plan (FDP) from Exxon to gain approval. The first FDP that the Guyana Government approved was for Liza Phase One, while Liza Phase Two is expected to start up in 2022.

The area where the Payara Project will be undertaken

According to the Natural Resources Ministry, the Payara project approval was a result of “several reviews and consultations by local and international experts”.
Prior to the approval, the Government of Guyana had decided to review the work already undertaken by the Department of Energy and Bayphase Oil and Gas Consultants on the Payara Project, so that the interest of all Guyanese would be protected and the Project would be in keeping with international transparency and accountability standards.
Most importantly, the Ministry noted, that the Canada-funded team of technical experts assessed the Project to ensure that all relevant regulations were complied with and were enforceable. “This included environmental standards and reservoir management to safeguard the interests of the people of Guyana and that their resources are developed in a sustainable and responsible manner to the benefit of the country”.

Natural Resources Minister Vickram Bharrat

The Government has said that it remained committed to managing and harvesting Guyana’s oil and gas resources sustainably “in keeping with internationally-recognised acceptable environmental standards and transparency for the benefit of all Guyanese”.
Just recently, Miguel Moyano, Executive Secretary of Arpel, a leading regional oil and gas association, suggested that with oil production expected to tip one million barrels of oil per day in the coming years, Guyana is slated to become a petroleum powerhouse in the Region.
“Guyana together with [Argentine unconventional formation] Vaca Muerta, I think, are the game-changers of our region,” Moyano, a petroleum expert, said during a BNamericas webinar.
According to Arpel, the emergence of Guyana as an oil-producing nation is interesting and exciting, as since the beginning of major oil discoveries here, oil companies around the world have been paying keen attention to how the country is developing its oil resources.
US oil giant Exxon has estimated that there were eight billion barrels of recoverable reserves in the Stabroek Block. From the Liza Phase One, Guyana has received well over US$100 million in cargo lift and royalty payments.
The Government has promised that funds from the country’s oil resources will go towards developing modern infrastructure and ensuring that citizens benefit from improved social services.