Senior Reporter
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With Venezuela’s vast gas reserves and T&T’s underused energy infrastructure creating a powerful regional opportunity, cross-border energy cooperation was a topic of discussion at yesterday’s Energy Conference.
Mala Baliraj, chair of the Energy Chamber of T&T, acknowledged the potential opportunities in her speech.
“There are two projects listed on this map where the major factor delaying execution is beyond Trinidad and Tobago’s direct control, namely the Shell/NGC investment in the Dragon field in Venezuela and the bp/NGC investment in the Manakin/Cocuina cross-border field. Recent changes in Venezuela might offer new hope that these two projects can move toward implementation,” Baliraj said.
“These two projects also need to be seen in a wider context. Venezuela holds massive gas reserves, somewhere in the region of 200 trillion cubic feet. Many of these are in non-associated gas fields in the east of the country, including offshore in both the Patao, Mejillones, Río Caribe, and Dragón complex to the northwest of Trinidad and the Plataforma Deltana area, off Trinidad’s southeast coast.”
She said given the proximity of these resources to existing Trinidad gas infrastructure, it made “excellent sense for both Trinidad and Venezuela to use Trinidadian infrastructure.”
bpTT president David Campbell agreed that this is an optimal scenario.
“We are talking a lot about Venezuela, but cross-border generally the industrial logic says, discover undeveloped resources in a place where perhaps people are less confident to invest right next to our underused resources,” Campbell said.
“Atlantic, Point Lisas and so on. There’s an obvious logic that can be made to work. So yes, I see the potential for growth in both those areas. We also, of course, are always interested in exploration more widely in other countries. Our kit is already fully depreciated and available; that is very competitive in comparison to building a new plant nearby.”
Touchstone Exploration’s Paul Baay also said he was optimistic about the opportunity presented by Venezuela but admitted there were some logistical points to be ironed out.
“I am optimistic about it. I mean, for us smaller producers that can maybe take a little more risk, I think it’s a pretty interesting opportunity. The trick is going to be timing, how you take advantage of that? We’re still trying to figure that out a little bit,” said Baay.
Day two of the Energy Conference will take place today at the Hyatt Regency.