The turquoise waters that have long brought treasure seekers to the Caribbean now are drawing a new kind of explorer as countries across the region increasingly open their seas to oil exploration.
From the Bahamas and Cuba down to Aruba and Suriname, international oil companies are lining up to locate potentially rich offshore deposits. The countries hope drilling could lead to a black-gold bonanza, easing demand for imported oil and diversifying their economies.
So far, Trinidad & Tobago is the only major hydrocarbons producer in the Caribbean and its waters are crowded with offshore platforms. The country sits just about seven miles off the coast of Venezuela which has the world’s largest proven oil reserves. It’s pushing hard into deep-water drilling and has signed production-sharing contracts with British oil company BP for new exploration blocks.
A growing number of other nations are also authorizing or at least aggressively pursuing offshore exploration.
The Bahamas recently announced it would try offshore exploratory drilling and said it should have enough information by late 2014 to decide whether it can move forward with production. A voter referendum would first have to decide the matter. Bahamas Petroleum Company CEO Simon Potter said a rig will drill to subsea depths of roughly 22,000 feet in some 1,600 feet of water adjacent to Cuba’s offshore territory.
Barbados and Jamaica have also been seeking well exploration in their seas, while the Anglo-Dutch group Shell announced in December it was preparing to sink its third offshore well in nearby French Guiana, an overseas French department, with other companies also exploring in deep waters there.
By Associated Press