南美新兴产油国圭亚那,如何在石油繁荣中实现转型?

文摘   2024-12-20 18:32   北京  


圭亚那——这个与加勒比海诸岛联系密切的南美小国正在进行大胆尝试,挑战本世纪的一大艰巨任务:在利用其化石燃料财富的同时,追求可持续发展,真正实现环境保护。


当低碳愿景遇上巨额石油储量

2015年,埃克森美孚公司(ExxonMobil)曾在圭亚那沿海发现大量石油,但在此前,圭亚那已经开始走上雄心勃勃的可持续发展转型之路。早在2009年,圭亚那就认识到其广袤雨林在应对气候变化中的重要价值,率先推出了《低碳发展战略》(LCDS)。这不仅仅是一项环境政策,而是对发展中国家实现经济增长的根本性反思。


该战略源于圭亚那对其自然财富的整体认识。雨林约占该国国土面积的三分之二,储存了约195亿吨二氧化碳当量,圭亚那将这些森林资源视为应对全球气候变化的重要资产。


圭亚那与挪威早期开展低碳领域的合作——挪威承诺提供高达2.5亿美元资金助力圭亚那保护热带雨林,这为《低碳发展战略》(LCDS)建立了可信度。这次合作也为圭亚那提供了重要的种子资金,助其在全国范围内进行环境资产管理所需的体制和能力建设,并搭建技术框架。


2015年,当地首次发现商业可采规模的石油,将圭亚那置于一个关键的决策点——超过110亿桶的石油当量足以在一夜之间改变这个国家的经济轨迹。面对如此巨大的财富,许多国家可能会放弃环境承诺。然而,圭亚那选择更新和加强其低碳战略,并制定了《2030年低碳发展战略》


更新战略中的平衡之举

圭亚那没有对立看待环境保护和资源开采的关系,而是打造出一条与自然资产并行的价值链。


例如,圭亚那通过可持续林业和碳信用(将环境管理货币化)获得森林收益。2022年,该国创造了历史,成为世界上首个获得私营部门认可的,拥有管辖规模碳信用的国家,这些信用以维护森林价值为基础。这一成就使其与赫斯公司(Hess Corporation)达成了7.5亿美元的具有里程碑意义的协议。


这项开创性的协议涉及在2022年至2032年期间销售3750万个碳信用额(约占圭亚那信用额发行量的30%),并设定了逐步增长的最低价格,最低价格从每吨15美元提高到25美元。如果市场价格超过价格底限,圭亚那将获得60%的收入分成。这些信用额度根据联合国ART TREES标准进行独立验证,符合联合国的社会和环境保障制度要求。


此外,圭亚那发起全球生物多样性联盟(Global Biodiversity Alliance),进一步拓展了边界。该联盟旨在开发一个超越碳的生物多样性信用体系,为生态系统服务价值评估创建一个全面框架。通过结合碳信用额、生物多样性信用额和可持续林业收入,圭亚那的可持续融资方法为发展中国家如何在保护自然资源的同时最大化其自然资产的价值,提供了一个新的范例。


同样,圭亚那没有将石油财富本身作为目的,而是将其视为资助气候转型的一种手段——将石油收入用于可再生能源项目、气候适应农业、海岸保护和绿色就业培训。例如,圭亚那政府已将国内生产总值的12%投资于升级改造排水和灌溉网络,并扩大关键地点的海防和河防结构的修复工作。除此之外,圭亚那还规划了水处理设施和全面的洪水管理计划。


预计到2027年,圭亚那的石油日产量将达到120万桶,此规模与欧佩克(OPEC)的一些成员国不相上下。但与许多石油生产国不同的是,圭亚那的产油增长与明确的环境承诺相辅相成,二者实现了平衡。


包容的力量

圭亚那最具创新性的举措在于其治理框架。该国负责监督低碳发展战略(LCDS)的多利益相关方指导委员会(Multi-Stakeholder Steering Committee)展现了一种全面的包容性决策模式,代表来自政府、民间社会、原住民组织、私营部门和学术界。具体来说,作为森林的传统守护者,原住民通过村级协商、选取专门代表参与决策、开展能力建设项目等,可以在圭亚那国家可持续发展战略的制定中发挥核心作用。


圭亚那的全球领导力

在2024年召开的联合国第16届《生物多样性公约》缔约方大会(COP 16)上,圭亚那对这一平衡战略的坚定承诺,得到了有力阐述。会上,该国自然资源部部长Vickram Bharrat介绍了圭亚那的发展历程,并表示这些举措不是一种妥协,而是一种开创性的可持续发展模式:


“作为一个发展中国家,同时也是一个拥有发展基建雄心的产油国,圭亚那面临着平衡经济增长与环境保护的挑战。然而,通过《2030 年低碳发展战略》,圭亚那致力于在确保发展的同时不损害自然资本。森林将继续作为圭亚那重要的碳汇和生物多样性载体,为气候行动和生态系统恢复提供支持。”


圭亚那还做出了颇具雄心的承诺:到2030年,该国将把保护区面积在国土面积的占比,从9%扩大到30%。在今年于阿塞拜疆举行的COP29上,圭亚那获得了气候报告“透明度奖”(Transparency Award),并担任“森林与气候领导人伙伴关系”(Forest and Climate Leaders’ Partnership)的联合主席,进一步展示了国家领导力。Bharrat呼吁超越理论的辩论,采取“可衡量、负责任的行动”,这凸显了圭亚那作为全球气候解决方案实际创新者的作用。


对转型国家的启示

圭亚那将潜在矛盾转化为互补优势的行动,为推进能源转型提供了令人信服的范式。圭亚那政府在监管迅速扩张的石油行业的同时,也在开拓生物多样性信贷并扩大保护区。这并非巧合,而是彰显了该国对现代发展需要平衡多种优先事项和收入来源的深刻理解。


圭亚那的低碳发展战略将石油财富视为通向可持续未来的桥梁,而不是最终目标。石油收入被系统地用于建设低碳经济所需的基础设施、体制建设和人力资本。这种方法背后是清晰的认知:石油繁荣虽然重要,但只是暂时的,保护森林和生物多样性所带来的益处是永久的。


对于其他石油生产国,尤其是发展中的产油国来说,圭亚那提供了一个“因地制宜”的模板,证明了发展中国家可以兼顾经济发展和环境管理。


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Guyana’s low-carbon model for resource-led development

 

Guyana is making a bold attempt to pursue sustainable development while capitalizing on its fossil fuel wealth. The small South American nation with Caribbean links has emerged as an unlikely laboratory for one of the 21st century’s most pressing challenges: how to harness natural resources while pursuing genuine environmental stewardship.

A low-carbon vision meets untold natural resource wealth

Guyana had embarked on an ambitious journey toward sustainable development long before ExxonMobil’s massive oil discoveries off its coast in 2015. In 2009, recognizing the value of its vast rainforests in the fight against climate change, Guyana launched its pioneering Low Carbon Development Strategy (LCDS). This wasn’t merely an environmental policy; it represented a fundamental rethinking of how a developing nation could approach economic growth.

The strategy’s origins lay in a holistic understanding of Guyana’s natural wealth. The country’s rainforests, covering roughly two thirds of its territory, store an estimated 19.5 billion tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. Rather than viewing these forests as obstacles to development, Guyana recognized them as vital assets in the global fight against climate change.

An early partnership with Norway—which pledged up to $250 million to help preserve Guyana’s rainforests—established the LCDS’s credibility. It provided vital seed funding, helping Guyana develop the institutional capacity and technical frameworks necessary for environmental asset management on a national scale.

The 2015 oil discoveries placed Guyana at a crucial decision point—over 11 billion barrels of oil equivalent were enough to transform the nation’s economic trajectory overnight. Many nations might have abandoned their environmental commitments in the face of such wealth. Instead, Guyana chose to update and strengthen its low-carbon strategy, creating LCDS 2030.

The balancing act of LCDS 2030

Guyana’s approach reflects a sophisticated understanding of its natural capital. Rather than treating environmental protection and resource extraction as mutually exclusive, Guyana developed parallel value streams from its natural assets.

The country’s forests, for instance, generate revenue through both sustainable forestry and carbon credits, which monetize environmental stewardship. In 2022, Guyana made history by becoming the first nation to receive private sector validation for forest conservation-based jurisdictional carbon credits, leading to a landmark $750 million agreement with Hess Corporation.

The groundbreaking deal involves the sale of 37.5 million carbon credits (about 30 percent of Guyana’s credit issuance) between 2022-32, with increasing minimum prices from $15 to $25 per ton and a 60 percent revenue share for Guyana if market prices exceed these floors. The credits are independently verified under the United Nations (UN) ART TREES standard and meet UN social and environmental safeguards.

The country has further pushed boundaries by launching a Global Biodiversity Alliance aiming to develop a biodiversity credits system that extends beyond carbon, creating a comprehensive framework for valuing ecosystem services. By combining carbon credits, biodiversity credits, and sustainable forestry income, Guyana’s sustainable finance approach offers a new paradigm for how developing nations can maximize the value of their natural assets while preserving them for future generations.

Similarly, rather than treating petroleum wealth as an end in itself, Guyana views it as a means to finance its climate transition. Oil revenues are channeled into renewable energy projects, climate-resilient agriculture, coastal protection, and green job training. For example, the government has invested 12 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product in upgrading drainage and irrigation networks and expanding rehabilitation of sea and river defense structures at critical locations. These investments are complemented by planned water treatment facilities and comprehensive flood management programs.

By 2027, Guyana is projected to produce 1.2 million barrels of oil per day, rivaling some OPEC members. But unlike many oil producers, this production surge is balanced with concrete environmental commitments.

The power of inclusion

The most innovative aspect of Guyana’s approach lies in its governance framework. The Multi-Stakeholder Steering Committee overseeing the LCDS represents a comprehensive model of inclusive decision-making, drawing representatives from government, civil society, Indigenous organizations, the private sector, and academia. Specifically, Indigenous communities—traditional stewards of the forests—are integrated through village-level consultations, dedicated representation in decision-making, and capacity-building programs, ensuring they play a central role in shaping Guyana’s national sustainable development strategy.

Guyana’s global leadership

The strength of Guyana’s commitment to this balanced approach was powerfully articulated at the 16th Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity in 2024. There, Vickram Bharrat, Guyana’s minister of natural resources, presented his nation’s journey not as a compromise, but as a pioneering model for development:

“As a developing, oil-producing nation with ambitious infrastructure projects, we face the challenge of balancing economic growth with environmental preservation. However, through the Low Carbon Development Strategy 2030, we are committed to ensuring that development proceeds without compromising our natural capital. Our forests will continue to serve as vital carbon sinks and biodiversity hotspots, supporting both climate action and ecosystem resilience.”

The minister’s words were backed by one of the most ambitious conservation commitments globally: expanding Guyana’s protected areas from 9 to 30 percent of its land mass by 2030.  At COP29 in Azerbaijan, Guyana further demonstrated its leadership by receiving the Transparency Award and co-chairing the Forest and Climate Leaders’ Partnership. Bharrat’s call to move beyond theoretical debates to “measurable, accountable action” underscored Guyana’s role as a practical innovator in global climate solutions.

Lessons for a world in transition

Guyana’s ability to transform potential contradictions into complementary strengths offers a compelling model for managing the energy transition. The same government that oversees a rapidly expanding oil sector is also pioneering biodiversity credits and expanding protected areas. This isn’t coincidental—it reflects a nuanced understanding that modern development requires balancing multiple priorities and revenue streams.

The strategy treats oil wealth not as an end goal, but as a bridge to a sustainable future. Oil revenues are systematically channeled into building the infrastructure, institutions, and human capital needed for a low-carbon economy. This approach recognizes that the oil boom, while significant, is temporary. The benefits of preserved forests and biodiversity, however, are permanent.

For other oil producers, particularly those in the developing world, Guyana offers a template that could be adapted to local conditions. The success of this model is already providing compelling evidence that developing nations need not choose between economic development and environmental stewardship. Instead, they can pursue a more balanced path that recognizes and monetizes the value of all their natural assets and builds toward a more sustainable future.



本文2024年12月16日发布于Atlantic Council。文章仅代表作者观点,不代表本公众号立场。


封面图源:South America Backpacker

翻译/韩迪  编辑/吕雅宁   

审核/汪燕辉 吕雅宁  排版/包林洁

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