Energy Minister Dr Roodal Moonilal has welcomed the latest developments in Shell’s Manatee gas project and called on the company to explore increased gas output, citing the urgent need to address Trinidad and Tobago’s gas shortage.
In a media statement, Dr Moonilal said, “I am very pleased with the progress Shell is making with the Manatee project. The most recent development is the arrival in the country of the MV Vox Amalia hopper dredger which will conduct trenching operations for a component of the Manatee pipeline. Related works are also ongoing to prepare infrastructure in Guayaguayare.”
He described the project as one that has taken shape over several administrations and outlined its background.
“In 2003, a Memorandum of Understanding (2003 MOU) concerning the procedure for the unitisation of cross-border hydrocarbon reservoirs was successfully negotiated and executed by Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela,” the energy minister recounted. “In 2007, a Framework Treaty on Unitisation of Hydrocarbon Reservoirs that extend across the delimitation line was signed and served as a template for the unitisation treaties for individual reservoirs.”
Dr Moonilal also recalled the work of the People’s Partnership administration, saying:
“In August 2010 and in February 2015, the Partnership Government led by Mrs Kamla Persad-Bissessar signed field-specific treaties for the Loran-Manatee and Manakin-Cocuina cross-border fields respectively. These two agreements meant that there was agreement, after technical study, as to the apportionment between both countries of the Original Gas in Place (OGIP). This was an important step towards the development of the Manatee project.”
According to the statement, this framework led to the de-unitisation of the Manatee field from the broader Loran-Manatee field, enabling development under a production sharing contract between Shell and the Ministry of Energy and Energy Industries (MEEI).
“The Ministry of Energy and Energy Industries is very focused on working with Shell to ensure the safe delivery of the Manatee project and first gas by 2027. This is an important step to right-siding the shortage of natural gas that we inherited in April 2025 and which has negatively impacted industrial output, government revenue and foreign exchange earnings.”
Dr Moonilal ended the statement with a direct call to action:
“Given the gas crisis we inherited,” he said, “in the coming months, we will be working with Shell to see if there are opportunities to increase the volumes of gas Manatee can bring to the Trinidad and Tobago economy.”