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Guyana's oil production fell to 620,000 barrels per day in January, the government reports

The Natural Resources Ministry reported on Friday that Guyana's oil production average fell to 620,000 barrels a day in January, down from 656,000 in December. This is the lowest monthly number since August.

Three floating installations are controlled by a consortium that includes Exxon Mobil, Hess, and CNOOC from China.

The average oil production of Guyana increased from 391,000 barrels per day in 2023 to 616,000 last year following upgrades at the facilities and production ramp up on one of group's vessels Prosperity which started operations late in 2023.

The report of the ministry did not go into detail about the fall.

In January, the government reported revenue of $230 millions from royalties and the share of oil production exported by the country. Guyana expects to earn $2.5 billion from the oil industry in 2025. This is a slight decrease from 2024, due mainly to lower crude prices.

This week, a fourth vessel produced by SBM Offshore left Singapore for Guyana. Exxon announced earlier this week that it is expected to start production in the third quarter. This will increase the consortium's capacity to 940,000 bpd.

Guyana's economy grew 43.6% last year as both oil production and exports increased. This was the fifth consecutive double-digit year for growth.

Last year, Latin America's new oil producer became the fifth largest crude exporter in the region after Brazil, Mexico and Venezuela. It was also identified as a major contributor to the global oil supply increase.

The government is pushing for the shift to natural gas as it pushes the energy executives and officials in Georgetown. (Reporting and writing by Kemol Kings, editing by Nia William)

(source: Reuters)