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Exxon to shut 2 platforms in Guyana for 2 weeks each to link pipeline

Exxon Mobil Corp. will close down 2 offshore oil production jobs in. Guyana for two weeks each, between July and August, to link a. natural gas pipeline, the company's country head Alistair. Routledge told press reporters in Georgetown on Tuesday.

The 140-mile (225-km) pipeline will feed Guyana's $1.9. billion gas-to-power project focused on ending the nation's. dependence on imported fuels and at reducing energy costs for. citizens.

Exxon has said it will stop production to satisfy a. commitment made with local authorities to have the pipeline. connected by year end, in spite of delays on the government-run. onshore part of the job.

The suggested pipeline would link overseas production. vessels to a power plant and a gas processing facility. The power plant and transmission lines will not be fully. functional before end-2025, Guyana officials have previously. said.

The overseas portion of the about $1 billion pipeline. that is under building by Exxon is 70% complete, Routledge. stated.

NO ESTIMATE ON RECOVERABLE RESERVES

At a press conference to upgrade reporters on the company's. works, Routledge said the company stopped revising quotes for. potential recoverable resources as it works to measure real. reserves, an industry metric that considers how much of the oil. and gas underground can be commercially developed.

Exxon has actually not updated in 2 years its price quotes of 11. billion barrels in recoverable resources at the Stabroek block,. in spite of a number of brand-new oil discoveries.

Exxon has not revealed a different reserves number for. the Stabroek block.

Our greater focus now is on how do we move resource to. reserves, since that's what creates earnings for the. country, Routledge said.

The oil reserves estimates for Guyana are an essential component to. specify how much of the Stabroek block would be worth on a. prospective sale.

The No. 2 U.S. oil producer, Chevron Corp, last. October accepted obtain Hess for about $53 billion in stock. But Exxon and CNOOC this year submitted an arbitration case claiming. they hold a right of very first refusal over Hess' Guyana properties.

That dispute is presently before the International Chamber. of Commerce and is not anticipated to be dealt with till late this. year. None of the parties have actually revealed how much they think. the property deserves.

(source: Reuters)