Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Guyana's Oil Boom Is Rewriting Its Future, But Price Risk Still Rules


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Guyana's offshore oil buildout has made it the region's fastest-growing economy on paper.
  • A low reported break-even near $28 a barrel cushions projects, not government revenue.
  • The real test is whether leaders avoid populist spending and protect the non-oil economy.

Guyana has pulled off one of the fastest economic pivots in the modern Americas. After major offshore discoveries began in 2015, a cascade of finds in and around the Stabroek area turned a small, 800,000-person country into an oil exporter of global interest.

More than 30 discoveries are commonly cited, with recoverable resources often put near 11 billion oil-equivalent barrels. That scale explains why Guyana now looks like an energy giant per person.

The production curve is equally stark. Output rose from early-stage levels to roughly 650,000 barrels per day in 2024, then reached about 900,000 barrels per day in November 2025.



Four floating production vessels now anchor the story: Liza Phase 1, Liza Phase 2, Payara, and Yellowtail. The Exxon-led consortium sits at the center, with Exxon as operator at 45%, alongside a 30% partner and CNOOC at 25%.
Guyana's oil boom faces limits
Next comes the second act. New projects such as Uaru and Whiptail are lined up for 2026–27, and later developments like Hammerhead are timed for 2029.

If schedules hold, Guyana's output could rise toward roughly 1.7 million barrels per day by around 2030. That would place it among the world's more consequential new suppliers.

Yet the boom's durability will be decided by prices and politics. Brent has been trading around the mid-$60s. Guyana's reported break-even near $28 per barrel suggests projects can still work at lower prices.

But lower prices still squeeze“profit oil,” tax flows, and the state's room to build. This is why fiscal rules matter more than slogans. Guyana's Natural Resource Fund is designed to smooth volatility and limit reckless drawdowns.

The danger is a familiar one: overheating construction, shortages of skilled labor, and“Dutch disease,” where oil crowds out other exports. Food and import prices can also bite, even when headline growth looks spectacular.

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The Rio Times

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