Guyana and Venezuela share the same oil basin, but vastly different outcomes. This investor-focused analysis shows why institutions—not reserves—drive energy success.
U.S. intervention in Venezuela has temporarily eased the long-standing territorial threat to Guyana's rapidly expanding oil industry, though the underlying dispute over Essequibo remains unresolved.
Guyana’s meteoric rise into a global oil powerhouse unfolded under the constant threat of Venezuelan territorial aggression, ...
As Trump attempts to convince the oil industry to invest in Venezuela, ExxonMobil has shown hesitance to take the offer. The ...
US staged flyover of border region Thursday after Maduro held national vote and alleged country’s support for annexation ...
The Guyana Government is confident of a ruling by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) this year to settle the ...
GUYANA is emerging as a far more attractive destination for energy investment than neighbouring Venezuela, according to United States (U.S.) politician, Marco ...
Region will struggle to maintain progress on deforestation. Deforestation rates in the Amazon rainforest fell near-60 percent this year (911,740 hectares) compared to last (2,062,939 hectares). Brazil ...
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned Venezuela against attempting to seize the disputed Essequibo region, emphasizing potential consequences. During his visit to Guyana, Rubio signed a security ...
Kendra Pierre-Louis: For Scientific American’s Science Quickly, I’m Kendra Pierre-Louis, in for Rachel Feltman. Over the past couple of weeks oil—specifically, Venezuelan oil—has been all over the ...