Suriname’s Delayed Oil Boom Is Finally Ready for Takeoff

The tiny impoverished South American country of Suriname has been battling for six years to launch a petroleum boom, which pundits believe will replicate neighboring Guyana’s oil rush. A combination of poor drilling results, high gas-to-oil ratio, and mismatched seismic data delayed the emergence of what could be South America’s last great offshore oil boom.…


Suriname’s Delayed Oil Boom Is Finally Ready for Takeoff

The tiny impoverished South American country of Suriname has been battling for six years to launch a petroleum boom, which pundits believe will replicate neighboring Guyana’s oil rush. A combination of poor drilling results, high gas-to-oil ratio, and mismatched seismic data delayed the emergence of what could be South America’s last great offshore oil boom. Suriname’s favorable regulatory environment and low break-even prices, coupled with the recent price shock following U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, will drive greater investment in the country’s oil boom.

After a slew of poor drilling results, including dry wells, during the 1960s and 70s Big Oil abandoned the offshore Guyana Suriname Basin, believing it held very little oil potential. Consequently, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) determined the sedimentary basin held very little petroleum. According to a May 2001 agency report, the Guyana Suriname Basin held somewhere between 2.8 and 32.6 million barrels of undiscovered oil resources with a mean estimate of 15.2 billion barrels. This saw Big Oil ignore the sedimentary basin, with drillers focusing on Atlantic coast Africa and Brazil.

Nonetheless, in a surprise development at the time during 2015, global supermajor ExxonMobil made a world-class oil discovery with the Liza-1 exploration well in Guyana’s 6.6-million-acre offshore Stabroek Block. That discovery, in the territorial waters of the contested Essequibo region, surprised Big Oil and the global petroleum industry after decades of poor drilling results. Liza-1 was the first of a swathe of high-quality oil discoveries in offshore Guyana, with over 35 made in the Stabroek Block alone. Exxon estimates the prolific oil acreage contains at least 11 billion barrels.

Suriname’s big moment came in January 2020, when APA Corporation discovered oil with the Maka Central 1 well in offshore Block 58. This was followed by four more commercial discoveries in the 1.4-million-acre oil block.

APA corp
APA corp


Source: APA Corporation.

By the end of 2022, however, it appeared that Suriname’s burgeoning oil boom had hit a major roadblock. TotalEnergies, which was now the operator of Block 58, chose to delay the final investment decision (FID).

You see, a combination of a high gas-to-oil ratio at existing discoveries, poor drilling results, and mismatched seismic data deeply concerned the French supermajor. As a result, TotalEnergies and 50% partner in Block 58 APA Corporation delayed the FID in late 2022, alarming Suriname’s government in the capital Paramaribo. A rapidly deteriorating economy, coupled with rising civil unrest as the cost-of-living spiraled, sparked fears of a financial crisis for the deeply impoverished former Dutch colony.

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