Since Monday, oil majors Exxon and Chevron have been locked in a high-stakes arbitration battle over the fate of an ocean’s worth of oil right off the Guyana coast. Last year, Chevron spent $53 billion to buy Hess, which has a 30 percent stake in an 11 billion barrel discovery of oil and gas belonging to the South American nation of Guyana. Exxon alleges that it has contractual rights to pre-empt the bid and has delayed the deal for 18 months in doing so. Hess’ share of the Guyana fields could be worth $40 billion. The project in Guyana — operated by Exxon, Hess and China’s Cnooc — is today six oil-production vessels pumping 650,000 barrels a day, which aims to reach 1.3 million barrels a day by 2027.
What happens when the rich buy the #rich?

2 adults dead, 1 child severely injured in head-on crash in Park Rapids
4h ago
Crash backs up northbound I-29 in Fargo
42m ago
Bismarck faith leaders rally for immigrant rights at Capitol demonstration
3h ago
In record heat, US ski resorts bulldoze snow, skiers wear bikinis
4h ago
South Dakota legislature reconvenes to consider 2 vetoes
34m ago
Chinese container ships pass through Strait of Hormuz at second attempt, data shows
2h ago

Comments