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Venezuela鈥檚 Vice President Delcy Rodr铆guez accused Guyana鈥檚 president Irfaan Ali of following mandates from Exxon Mobil Corp. and the U.S. Southern Command regarding claims to the disputed Essequibo territory located between the two South American countries.
Rodr铆guez, speaking on Oct. 31 during a Venezuelan state television broadcast, said Ali is turning his back on negotiations mandated by a Geneva Agreement in 1996.
鈥淭he 1899 arbitration award set the limits of territorial dispossession against Venezuela because there was fraud led between the British Empire and the U.S.鈥斺€ ruling that was made without Venezuelan representation,鈥� Rodr铆guez said. 鈥淸Ali] follows a script to the letter created by Exxon Mobil to sow a confrontation between two neighboring countries to rob Venezuela鈥檚 resources.鈥�
Venezuelan claims on the onshore and offshore Essequibo territory covers portions of the prolific Stabroek deepwater block where Exxon Mobil leads a consortium including Chevron Corp., which recently acquired Hess Corp. in a $53 billion all-stock deal, and China鈥檚 CNOOC.
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Stabroek covers 6.6 million acres, or 26,800 sq km, and holds over 11 Bboe of estimated gross discovered recoverable resources. Six floating production storage and offloading (FPSO) vessels with a gross capacity of over 1.2 MMbbl/d are expected to be online by the end of 2027, and there is potential for up to 10 FPSOs to develop the resources, according to Exxon and Hess.
And last week, the consortium announced further successful results at the Lancetfish-2 appraisal well, which found 125 ft of net oil pay in appraisal reservoirs and approximately 65 ft of net oil pay in a new discovery interval, Hess said Oct. 25 in a press release.
Exxon, which once operated in Venezuela, departed the OPEC country in the mid-2000s over disputes with the then Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez over his mandate that state-owned Petr贸leos de Venezuela (PDVSA) take on a majority stake in operations that belonged to Exxon, as well as other international oil companies.
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For its part, U.S. Southern Command, one of 11 unified combatant commands within the U.S. Department of Defense, is responsible for providing contingency planning, operations and security cooperation in Central America, South America and the Caribbean (except U.S. commonwealths, territories and possessions).
鈥淏order issues are for governments and appropriate international organizations to address,鈥� Exxon Mobil media relations advisor Michelle Gray told Hart Energy.
Officials with Southern Command didn鈥檛 immediately respond to an email request for comments from Hart Energy.
Essequibo territory referendum
Venezuela will hold a referendum on Dec. 3 to allow its citizens to vote on issues related to prior court decisions related to the disputed Essequibo territory.
The referendum will allow Venezuelan citizens to 鈥渏oin the fight that the national government is promoting in defense of the territory that for historical reasons belongs to Venezuela,鈥� Venezuela鈥檚 President Nicol谩s Maduro said Oct. 31 during his 鈥淐onMaduro+鈥� national television broadcast.
鈥淵ou, Mr. President of Guyana, [are] an instrument of the Southern Command and a politician on an Exxon Mobil salary. [You will] not get your way,鈥� Maduro said.
Importantly, Maduro says the referendum will judge public sentiment to back his plans to safeguard the Essequibo territory 鈥渂y any means, according to/with the law.鈥�
OAS and Caricom reactions
Guyana鈥檚 Prime Minister Mark Phillips, speaking during an address to the Organization of American States (OAS), said Venezuela鈥檚 claim to the Essequibo poses a direct threat to Guyana鈥檚 sovereignty and territorial integrity, Guyana鈥檚 Department of Public Information (DPI) said in a Nov. 1 press release.
Members of the intergovernmental organization Caribbean Community (Caricom), as well as the U.S. and Brazil, have announced unwavering and unequivocal support for Guyana as well as for a peaceful settlement of the controversy in accordance with international law.
鈥淓ssequibo is ours, every square inch of it. The 1899 Arbitral Award made it clear that it was a full and final settlement,鈥� Guyana鈥檚 President Ali said during a speech broadcast Oct. 30 by the DPI. 鈥淲e are lawful and peaceful people. We respect international law, and that is where this controversy, raised by Venezuela, must be settled.鈥�
Caricom, an organization of twenty countries鈥�15 member states and five associate members鈥攊s clearly alarmed by statements coming out of Venezuela and its ruling party officials.
鈥淭wo of the questions approved to be posed in the referendum, if answered in the affirmative, would authorize the government of Venezuela to embark on the annexation of territory, which constitutes part of Guyana, and to create a state within Venezuela known as Guyana Essequibo,鈥� Caricom said Oct. 25 in a press release.
The two questions Caricom is referring to seek an affirmation and implementation of Venezuela鈥檚 stance on the issue 鈥渂y all means, according to/with the law.鈥� Caricom said the language used in the referendum鈥檚 questions could be perceived by 鈥渞easonable persons to conclude that 鈥榖y all means,鈥� includes means of force or war.鈥�
The Caricom Secretariat office, with headquarters in Georgetown, Guyana, remains supportive of the judicial process to solve the long-standing territorial dispute. International law strictly prohibits the government of one state from unilaterally seizing, annexing or incorporating the territory of another state, Caricom said.
Caricom said in the press release that it 鈥渉opes that Venezuela will engage fully in that process before the International Court of Justice, which has determined that it has the jurisdiction in the case brought before it to determine the validity of the 1899 Arbitral Award which Venezuela questions. The court鈥檚 final decision will ensure a resolution that is peaceful, equitable and in accordance with international law.鈥�