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Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Beyond Energy The Diversification Imperative

by

20150611

The need for eco­nom­ic di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion has been a stan­dard pol­i­cy pre­scrip­tion since the mid-1970s when the sec­ond in­ter­na­tion­al oil shock sent the T&T econ­o­my in­to a ma­jor tail­spin.

Led by the In­ter­na­tion­al Mon­e­tary Fund and sup­port­ed by lo­cal stake-hold­ers, the call has be­come more stri­dent in re­cent years be­cause of struc­tur­al changes tak­ing place in glob­al en­er­gy mar­kets and new un­cer­tain­ties about re­main­ing oil and gas re­serves.

Last month, in ex­plain­ing its down­grade of Gov­ern­ment bond rat­ing, Moody's, the glob­al rat­ing agency, cit­ed among oth­er fac­tors the coun­try's "lim­it­ed eco­nom­ic di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion, which weighs heav­i­ly on eco­nom­ic growth prospects".

In a se­ries of four ar­ti­cles, two re­tired bankers, ex­am­ine the ur­gent need for mean­ing­ful eco­nom­ic di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion and make a case for an in­ten­si­fied ex­ploita­tion of our com­par­a­tive ad­van­tage in fi­nan­cial ser­vices and tourism.

The Back­ground.

To any ca­su­al ob­serv­er, Trinidad and To­ba­go is a strik­ing ex­am­ple of a de­vel­op­ing coun­try that has made good use of its nat­ur­al re­source en­dow­ment, oil and gas, to in­crease its lev­el of de­vel­op­ment and raise the liv­ing stan­dards of its pop­u­la­tion. How­ev­er, notwith­stand­ing var­i­ous at­tempts over the past few decades, "to sow the oil", the de­vel­op­ment of a com­pet­i­tive, dy­nam­ic and in­no­v­a­tive non-en­er­gy ex­port sec­tor has been il­lu­sive.

Trinidad and To­ba­go is, by in­ter­na­tion­al stan­dards, a very small oil pro­duc­er. At its peak in 1978, oil pro­duc­tion av­er­aged 230,000 bar­rels per day. Oil gave way to nat­ur­al gas in the 1990s and in 2006, oil and gas out­put reached 800,000 bar­rels per day oil equiv­a­lent.

While the new gas dis­cov­er­ies, com­bined with the surge in in­ter­na­tion­al oil prices, re­sult­ed in a ma­jor eco­nom­ic boom from the late 1990s, these fac­tors al­so sig­nif­i­cant­ly in­creased the econ­o­my's de­pen­dence on oil and gas.

Heavy de­pen­dence of an econ­o­my on one sec­tor has al­ways been rec­og­nized as a ma­jor source of eco­nom­ic vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty. The risk is com­pound­ed if the dom­i­nant sec­tor is min­er­al re­source-based. In such cir­cum­stances, the case for di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion rests on sev­er­al grounds:

�2 Di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion pro­vides some in­sur­ance against the in­her­ent volatil­i­ty of min­er­al re­source prices.

�2 Min­er­al re­sources are not large em­ploy­ers of labour and cre­ate few sec­toral link­ages.

�2 Per­haps the most com­pelling rea­son, is that, at some stage, the nat­ur­al re­sources will be ful­ly de­plet­ed and the econ­o­my will need to have al­ter­na­tive growth en­gines.

Point Lisas: Ex­pand­ing en­er­gy fron­tiers

As far back as in 1969, stat­ed strat­e­gy of the First Com­pre­hen­sive Five-year De­vel­op­ment Plan was "to con­vert the rents from the off­shore econ­o­my to build a vi­brant, in­ter­na­tion­al­ly com­pet­i­tive on­shore econ­o­my."

Fol­low­ing failed at­tempts to es­tab­lish a vi­able, glob­al­ly�com­pet­i­tive light man­u­fac­tur­ing sec­tor, around the mid­dle of the 1970s, the Gov­ern­ment of the day em­barked on a strat­e­gy which es­sen­tial­ly in­volved us­ing the new dis­cov­er­ies of nat­ur­al gas to ex­pand the fron­tiers of the en­er­gy sec­tor. This strat­e­gy, which gave rise to the cre­ation of the Point Lisas In­dus­tri­al Es­tate, has come to be con­sid­ered as a mod­el of down­stream en­er­gy sec­tor de­vel­op­ment for small coun­tries.

As a re­sult of this strat­e­gy, Trinidad and To­ba­go is now a ma­jor ex­porter of methanol, am­mo­nia and urea. With our four Liqui­fied Nat­ur­al Gas (LNG) plants, Trinidad and To­ba­go was up to re­cent­ly, the ma­jor sup­pli­er of LNG to the East Coast of the US. For many, the Point Lisas com­plex re­mains our most vi­sion­ary eco­nom­ic de­ci­sion since In­de­pen­dence.

Un­for­tu­nate­ly, how­ev­er, this im­pres­sive petro­chem­i­cal com­plex has made our a econ­o­my even more de­pen­dent on oil and gas. More­over, the vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty of the econ­o­my has re­mained, giv­en the de­pen­dence of the petro­chem­i­cal sec­tor on gas and the high de­gree of price cor­re­la­tion be­tween oil and gas.

Run­ning Out of Time

The un­cer­tain out­look fac­ing our en­er­gy sec­tor, be­cause of both ex­ter­nal and do­mes­tic fac­tors, now makes the need for the di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion of the econ­o­my both ur­gent and crit­i­cal.

Glob­al en­er­gy mar­kets have re­cent­ly un­der­gone ma­jor struc­tur­al changes, which have con­tributed to a de­cline of about fifty per cent in world prices over the past nine months or so. While not as dra­mat­ic, gas prices have al­so seen an ap­pre­cia­ble de­cline.

As re­gards do­mes­tic sup­ply, oil pro­duc­tion is now a mere 85,000 bar­rels per day and nat­ur­al gas out­put has al­so been on the de­cline. In fact, the cur­rent short­age of nat­ur­al gas sup­plies has raised ques­tions about the fu­ture vi­a­bil­i­ty of the petro­chem­i­cal sec­tor.

To com­pound the sit­u­a­tion, since 2002, there has been a steady fall in the lev­el of proven oil and gas re­serves. The 2014 Scott-Ry­der re­port puts the lev­el of proven gas re­serves at the equiv­a­lent of 8.5 years, and for oil 12 years .

Ad­mit­ted­ly, in­ter­est in oil and gas ex­plo­ration has been on the in­crease.

Even if on­go­ing ex­plo­ration ac­tiv­i­ties are suc­cess­ful, how­ev­er, the chang­ing glob­al sup­ply sit­u­a­tion, re­flect­ing the boom in shale gas pro­duc­tion could se­ri­ous­ly al­ter the glob­al sup­ply/de­mand bal­ance with neg­a­tive con­se­quences for long-term oil and gas prices and the prof­itabil­i­ty of the do­mes­tic pe­tro­le­um in­dus­try.

It is worth not­ing that T&T is a high cost oil and gas pro­duc­er and that deep­wa­ter ex­plo­ration is a high-cost busi­ness. If oil prices plateau at around US$ 60 per bar­rel, as many an­a­lysts ex­pect com­pa­nies, would cer­tain­ly need to re-as­sess their ex­plo­ration plans and some will cer­tain­ly shift in­vest­ment to low­er-cost pro­duc­ers � the new­ly-emerg­ing oil and gas pro­duc­ers. The fu­ture is in­deed stacked against our en­er­gy sec­tor.

At the very least, an in­ten­si­fi­ca­tion of the di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion ef­fort is ur­gent­ly need­ed to pro­tect against the down­side risk of im­mi­nent oil and gas de­ple­tion and/or the rad­i­cal changes that are like­ly to be faced by the do­mes­tic pe­tro­le­um sec­tor.

A rea­son­able con­clu­sion is that while oil and gas have been main­ly re­spon­si­ble for the high liv­ing stan­dards en­joyed by Trinidad and To­ba­go, it would take a more di­ver­si­fied econ­o­my to en­sure that these liv­ing stan­dards are main­tained or en­hanced. In the jar­gon of the econ­o­mists, eco­nom­ic di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion has now be­come a pre­con­di­tion for medi­um-term sus­tain­abil­i­ty.

The next ar­ti­cle will dis­cuss the role of an In­ter­na­tion­al Fi­nan­cial Cen­ter as one pil­lar of a fea­si­ble di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion strat­e­gy.

Dis­clo­sure: The au­thors, Ewart S Williams and Richard P Young, are part-time con­sul­tants who are work­ing on a project that ex­plores the deep­en­ing of T&T's In­ter­na­tion­al Fi­nan­cial Cen­tre


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