Oil production in South America’s Guyana has gone from strength to strength in recent years, as international oil majors develop several new oil-producing regions. This has led Guyana to become one of the most-promising oil producers in the Americas, with high hopes for the future of “low-carbon” oil production. Now, following the United States intervention in neighbouring Venezuela, the holder of the world’s largest oil reserves, many are questioning whether the potential expansion of Venezuela’s oil production could have a knock-on effect on Guyana’s big oil plans.

The potential involvement of U.S. oil companies in Venezuela’s oil industry could increase the regional risk of territorial disagreements. For example, Venezuela has previously claimed that a large, resource-rich area – Essequibo – in neighbouring Guyana actually belongs to Venezuela. Essequibo is the disputed area that constitutes roughly two-thirds of Guyana. It has vast natural resource reserves, including gold and diamonds, as well as offshore oil.

At present, the U.S. oil majors Exxon Mobil and Chevron, and China’s CNOOC, are developing oil operations in Guyana’s waters. ExxonMobil first discovered vast high-quality oil reserves off the coast of Guyana in 2015, which has led several international players to invest heavily in the country’s oil industry in recent years, supporting rapid economic development in the tiny South American country. This also led the government of Venezuela reassert its claim over the Essequibo region.

The two countries have been fighting over which country is the rightful owner of Essequibo for over a century. In 1841, a recently independent Venezuela claimed the region that had been ceded by the Dutch to Great Britain in 1814 during the Napoleonic Wars. Then, in 1831, Britain merged Essequibo with other former Dutch territories, Demerara and Berbice, to form the British colony of Guiana. In 1899, an international arbitral tribunal formally awarded the territory to Britain, while Guyana was still under its colonial rule, a ruling that Venezuela has staunchly disputed.

Venezuela’s Maduro government accused Guyana and the U.S. of pursuing legal colonialism by developing the Essequibo region. However, in 2018, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled that Guyana’s accord was legal and binding. Following the ICJ ruling, in 2023, the Maduro government launched a large-scale military buildup along the Guyanese border. It installed bases, runways, and other military infrastructure in the region and threatened to annex Essequibo. The authoritarian president held a referendum that same year, in which 95.9 percent reportedly supported the move.

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