| ADVISORY REPORT | GLIAG PROPRIETARY |
SURINAME V3
From Resource Extraction to Energy-Driven
Economic Transformation
Hybrid FLNG–Gas-to-Shore and Modular Refining Strategy
Written by Marcel Chin-A-Lien
Petroleum & Energy Advisor
Partner — Golden Lane Investments Advisory Group (GLIAG)
25 March 2026
PART I
Executive Summary & Strategic Context
DISCLAIMER
| This report represents the independent professional vision, analysis and advisory opinion of Marcel Chin-A-Lien, Petroleum & Energy Advisor and Partner at Golden Lane Investments Advisory Group (GLIAG).Neither the author nor Golden Lane Investments Advisory Group (GLIAG) represents, acts on behalf of, or is affiliated with the Government of Suriname, Staatsolie Maatschappij Suriname N.V., or any public policy institution or regulatory body of the Republic of Suriname.The views, models, and recommendations expressed in this document are based on publicly available information, independent technical analysis, and professional judgment. They do not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice, and should not be relied upon as such without independent verification.This document is confidential and proprietary to GLIAG. It may not be reproduced, distributed, or disclosed to any third party without prior written consent. |
Independent advisory opinion. Does not represent the Government of Suriname or any policy institution.
SURINAME V3 — Hybrid FLNG–Gas-to-Shore StrategyGLIAG — Confidential
1. Executive Summary
Suriname stands at the threshold of a structural economic transformation. With the development of offshore oil fields — and Gran Morgu in Block 58 in particular — the country will, from 2028 onwards, benefit from a sustained and substantial revenue stream from oil production. Based on a 20% working interest, this translates to approximately 150 million barrels net over a period of roughly 25 years.
This development opens a historic window of opportunity. At the same time, it marks a moment at which many resource-rich nations have historically failed. International experience consistently demonstrates that commodity wealth, absent deliberate strategic deployment, rarely leads to lasting economic development. Instead, countries tend to find themselves locked into export-dependent economies — exposed to price volatility and generating limited employment and industrial growth.
| THE CORE QUESTION |
| The central question for Suriname is not how much oil it produces, but how that oil and its associated gas are put to work within the economy. |
Recent developments in Guyana illustrate this challenge. Despite rapid growth in oil production, the country remains heavily reliant on imported refined products. This underscores a fundamental problem: upstream success does not automatically translate into downstream control or economic sovereignty.
The GLIAG Model: Gas-to-Shore + Industrial Activation + optional Refining — an alternative development pathway.
In this model, energy is not primarily exported; it is deployed as the foundation for domestic economic activity. Gas is converted into electricity and industrial inputs, driving down costs, raising productivity, and generating broad-based economic growth.
Model Comparison: Extraction versus Transformation
| Traditional Extraction Model | GLIAG Transformation Model |
| Focus: Extraction and export | Focus: Transformation and value creation |
| Gas = export commodity | Gas = economic foundation |
| Revenue tied to export prices | Revenue base broadened via industrialisation |
| Limited local economic spin-off | Catalyst for employment and growth |
| Energy security not guaranteed | Energy security as a policy objective |
| Structural dependency persists | Structural autonomy systematically built |
The distinction between these two approaches is fundamental. The traditional model extracts value from the ground and transfers it to the market. The GLIAG model uses that value as the foundation for building a broader, more resilient economic structure. The choices Suriname makes in the coming years will determine its economic architecture for decades to come.
2. Strategic Context — Constraints and Opportunity
Suriname operates as a relatively small, open economy with limited industrial capacity. The production base is narrow and heavily concentrated in a small number of sectors. Energy costs, meanwhile, are comparatively high — a structural constraint that has long acted as a brake on economic development.
| STRUCTURAL CONSTRAINT |
| High energy costs function as an implicit tax on the economy. They raise the cost base for businesses, erode the competitiveness of domestic production, and reduce Suriname’s attractiveness to investors. |
In sectors such as manufacturing, agriculture, and processing, energy is often the deciding factor between profitability and loss. The availability of offshore gas and oil, however, creates a singular opportunity to break this structural constraint. If energy can be made available at lower cost and with greater reliability, it can function as a catalyst for sustained economic growth.
Regional market dynamics. The regional context substantially amplifies this opportunity.
The combined market of Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana represents a demand for approximately 45,000 to 75,000 barrels per day of refined petroleum products. This demand is currently met almost entirely through imports from international markets.
Three Structural Consequences of Import Dependency
1. Capital outflow: Capital flows structurally out of the region through payments to international suppliers.
2. Energy insecurity: Energy security depends on external supply chains that are vulnerable to geopolitical disruption and logistical risk.
3. Price transmission: Global commodity price fluctuations pass directly into the local economy, with no structural buffer.
For Suriname, this creates a twofold strategic opportunity. On one hand, the country can strengthen its own energy supply. On the other, it can position itself as part of a regional energy system that is more efficient and more resilient than the current import-driven structure.
| STRATEGIC URGENCY |
| The challenge is to seize this opportunity with the requisite timeliness and strategic intent. The window is open, but it will not remain so indefinitely. Decisions on infrastructure, legislation, and investment attraction must be taken within the next two to three years. |
3. The Resource Paradox — From Extraction to Transformation
The history of resource-rich nations reveals a recurring pattern. Countries with significant oil and gas reserves frequently experience an initial period of rapid economic growth, followed by stagnation, volatility, and limited structural development. This phenomenon is commonly referred to as the “resource curse” — but it is, in essence, the consequence of a fundamentally flawed economic model.
The dominant linear model:
Oil → Export → Revenue → Consumption
Under this model, oil is produced, exported, and converted into government revenue. Those revenues are then deployed to fund consumptive expenditure — subsidies, public sector expansion, and short-term social programmes. While this approach offers an attractive near-term cash flow, it generates no durable economic structure.
The limitations of the linear model are fundamental:
• Employment remains confined to the upstream sector, which is relatively capital-intensive and not labour-intensive
• No broad industrial base is created
• The economy remains exposed to external markets and price volatility
• Productivity in non-extractive sectors remains depressed
The result is an economy that grows in terms of revenue, but not in terms of productive capacity.
The GLIAG model introduces a fundamentally different logic:
Gas → Energy → Industry → Products → Economic System
Under this model, gas is not primarily exported; it is deployed as an input for domestic economic activity. Energy is made available at lower cost and with greater reliability, with direct impact on productivity and the investment climate.
The effects of the GLIAG model are multiplicative:
• Lower energy costs reduce the cost of production across multiple sectors
• Industries become viable where they were previously uneconomic
• Employment grows across downstream and industrial activities
• The economy becomes less dependent on external markets
The distinction between the two models is fundamental. The first extracts value from the ground and transfers it to global markets. The second uses that value as the foundation for constructing a broader and more resilient domestic economic structure.
| KEY INSIGHT |
| The wealth does not reside in the oil itself. It resides in how that oil — and its associated energy — is deployed within the economy. |
4. Strategic Decision Framework — Three Paths for Suriname
Based on the foregoing analysis, Suriname’s strategic choice can be framed as a decision between three distinct development pathways. Each carries its own logic, advantages, and constraints. The choice made will define the country’s economic architecture for decades.
| Option 1 — Export-Oriented Model |
Advantages
• Rapid and immediate revenue generation
• Low institutional and technical complexity
• Relatively straightforward to implement
Disadvantages
• Minimal employment creation
• No structural economic diversification
• High dependence on oil price cycles
• No control over downstream energy supply
Over the long term, this model produces an economy that is financially dependent but structurally fragile.
| Option 2 — Deferred Development |
Advantages
• Reduced near-term risk exposure
• Opportunity to learn from comparable countries
• Flexibility to adapt policy choices over time
Disadvantages
• Loss of strategic momentum
• Missed investment opportunities
• Falling behind regional development trajectories
• Risk that infrastructure and markets develop elsewhere
Deferral appears to be a prudent choice. In practice, it is an implicit choice for passivity — with compounding opportunity costs.
| Option 3 — GLIAG Transformation Model |
Advantages
• Structural and sustained economic growth
• Improved energy security
• Industrial development and broad employment creation
• Reduction of import dependency
• Opportunity for regional strategic positioning
Disadvantages
• Higher initial complexity
• Requires strong governance and institutional capacity
• Capital-intensive in the early phase
The GLIAG model is the only option of the three that delivers lasting economic sovereignty and structural resilience.
Comparative Overview — Three Development Paths
| Criteria | Export Model | Deferral | GLIAG Model |
| Near-term revenue | High | Medium | Medium |
| Long-term growth | Low | Low | High |
| Employment creation | Low | Medium | High |
| Energy security | Low | Medium | High |
| Economic diversification | Low | Low | High |
| Strategic control | Low | Medium | High |
| STRATEGIC CONCLUSION |
| The GLIAG Transformation Model is the only option that simultaneously addresses all strategic objectives: growth, security, employment, diversification, and sovereign control. |
5. GLIAG System Architecture — From Concept to Integrated Energy Economy
The GLIAG model should not be understood as a single project, but as an integrated system in which energy, industry, and infrastructure are interconnected. It is this systems integration that distinguishes an energy-driven economy from a conventional resource economy.
The architecture of the GLIAG system:
Gas → Power → Industry → Refining → Products → Regional System
This is not a linear chain but a dynamic system in which each component reinforces the others.
5.1 Gas as the Primary Catalyst
Gas is the keystone of the entire system. Unlike oil — which is primarily exported — gas can be deployed domestically as an input for economic activity.
By bringing gas onshore via Gas-to-Shore infrastructure, a stable and comparatively low-cost energy source is established. The direct implications are significant:
• Electricity costs decrease materially
• Energy security is substantially enhanced
• Dependence on imported fuels is structurally reduced
Gas is therefore not merely a resource. It is a strategic instrument.
5.2 Power as the Core Value Driver
Electricity is the most powerful economic lever within the GLIAG model.
Unlike oil revenues, which are linear in nature, electricity has a multiplicative effect. Lower, more stable electricity prices transmit through virtually every sector of the economy:
• Industrial production becomes more cost-competitive
• Agriculture is able to intensify
• Service industries become more competitive
The effect is systemic: a reduction in energy costs has a measurable impact on the entire economic structure.
5.3 Industrial Activation — The Missing Middle
Many resource economies fail precisely because they never develop an industrial base. GLIAG addresses this explicitly by placing industry at the centre of the model.
Potential industrial applications include:
• Agro-processing (rice, fish, timber)
• Light manufacturing and assembly
• Building materials and cement production
• Energy-intensive processing industries
The availability of affordable energy makes each of these activities economically viable.
5.4 Refining as a Supporting Layer
Within this system, the refinery plays a specific but deliberately bounded role.
The refinery is not a core component; it is a value capture layer. It enhances the value of domestic crude and contributes to energy security, but it is not the primary driver of economic growth.
This positioning is critical to avoid misallocating capital to a prestige project at the expense of higher-value system components.
| KEY INSIGHT |
| The greatest value is not created by refining oil. It is created by making affordable, reliable energy available to the economy as a whole. |
6. Hybrid FLNG–Gas-to-Shore Strategy — Aligning Financial and Economic Objectives
Gas development in Suriname is frequently framed as a binary choice between FLNG (Floating LNG) and Gas-to-Shore. This framing is misleading. In practice, these options represent two distinct objectives:
| FLNGoptimises project financial returns | Gas-to-Shoreoptimises national economic value |
6.1 FLNG — Financial Optimisation
Characteristics
• Relatively fast development timeline
• Limited onshore infrastructure requirements
• Direct access to international LNG prices
Advantages
• High internal rates of return (typically 18–25% IRR)
• Lower execution complexity
• Early cashflow generation
Limitations
• Minimal local employment creation
• Limited industrial impact
• Negligible contribution to economic diversification
FLNG is fundamentally a financial instrument. It optimises investor returns but does not transform the host economy.
6.2 Gas-to-Shore — Economic Transformation
Characteristics
• Higher upfront capital investment
• Requires onshore infrastructure development
• Integration with power generation and industry
Advantages
• Structural reduction in energy costs
• Industrial base development
• Broad employment creation
• Meaningful economic diversification
Limitations
• Greater execution complexity
• Longer development timeline
• Dependent on governance quality and institutional capacity
Gas-to-Shore is fundamentally an economic instrument. It may offer lower investor IRRs, but it creates far greater national economic value.
6.3 The Case for a Hybrid Model
The optimal strategy does not require choosing between FLNG and Gas-to-Shore. A hybrid model combines the strengths of both approaches.
The hybrid model allocates gas flows as follows:
• A portion of gas → FLNG (near-term cashflow and investor returns)
• A portion of gas → Gas-to-Shore (economic development and industrial activation)
This creates a balance between:
• Short-term revenue generation
• Long-term structural economic growth
Comparative Overview — FLNG vs Gas-to-Shore
| Factor | FLNG | Gas-to-Shore |
| IRR | High | Medium |
| Complexity | Low | High |
| Time to Revenue | Short | Medium |
| Economic Impact | Low | High |
| Employment Creation | Low | High |
| STRATEGIC CONCLUSION |
| The hybrid model is the only strategy that simultaneously satisfies the financial requirements of investors and the economic development objectives of the Surinamese state. |
7. Refinery Strategy — From Concept to Fit-for-Purpose Design
The role of the refinery within the GLIAG model must be defined explicitly and realistically. In many resource economies, a refinery is treated as a symbol of industrialisation. In practice, however, refineries are capital-intensive, operate on modest margins, and are highly sensitive to market dynamics.
The risk is that a refinery is developed as a prestige project rather than as an economically rational component of a broader system.
| POSITIONING |
| Within GLIAG, the refinery is not positioned as the core. It is a value capture mechanism within an energy-driven economy. |
7.1 Design Philosophy
The refinery must be designed on the basis of four core principles:
| 1 | Fit-for-Purpose Configuration | No complex deep-conversion refinery. The configuration is optimised for the available crude slate — light sweet offshore oil from Gran Morgu and potentially Guyana. |
| 2 | Diesel Optimisation | Regional demand is dominated by diesel — for transport, mining, and industry. The configuration must therefore maximise diesel yield. |
| 3 | Modularity | Phased expansion to manage risk and capital exposure: Phase 1 (5–10 kb/d) → Phase 2 (15–20 kb/d) → Phase 3 (25–30 kb/d). |
| 4 | Energy Integration | Use of low-cost gas from Gas-to-Shore infrastructure reduces operating costs and improves the refinery’s competitive position. |
7.2 Strategic Positioning
The refinery serves three distinct functions within the broader GLIAG system:
| 1 | Import Substitution | Reduces dependence on imported refined products, retaining capital within the regional economy |
| 2 | Value Uplift | Increases the market value of domestic crude through downstream processing |
| 3 | Regional Supply Stability | Supports energy security across the Guyana–Suriname–French Guiana corridor |
| KEY INSIGHT |
| A refinery does not make an economy. But an economy without refining capacity leaves value on the table. |
8. Mass Balance — Beyond Numbers
A refinery processing approximately 25 kb/d of light sweet crude produces a product slate that closely matches the structure of regional demand. The indicative output breakdown below is not arbitrary — it reflects the economic composition of the region.
Indicative Output — 25 kb/d Refinery (Light Sweet Crude)
| Product | Volume (bpd) | Share | Strategic Significance |
| Diesel | ~10,200 | ~41% | High |
| Gasoline | ~5,500 | ~22% | Medium |
| Jet Fuel | ~2,700 | ~11% | Growing |
| LPG | ~3,000 | ~12% | Critical |
| Other | remainder | ~14% | Low |
8.1 Interpretation
The product distribution reflects the underlying structure of the regional economy:
• Diesel dominates due to transport, mining, and industrial use
• Gasoline serves the consumer market
• Jet fuel demand is growing alongside regional air connectivity
• LPG is essential for households and small businesses
| STRATEGIC IMPLICATION |
| This refinery is not configured as a global player. It is a regionally optimised system — designed to serve a specific market with specific needs. |
9. Economic Model — Where the Real Value Lies
One of the most persistent misconceptions in energy project development is that refining represents the primary source of value creation. In reality, the core of economic value in the GLIAG system resides in energy — not in crude processing.
9.1 CAPEX Overview
Indicative capital investment requirements by system component:
| Component | Indicative Range |
| Gas-to-Shore | $300–800 million |
| Power Generation | $120–300 million |
| Refinery (modular) | $100–300 million |
| Infrastructure | $200–400 million |
9.2 Value Composition
Annual economic value generation is dominated by electricity and LPG/NGL — not by refinery margins:
| Component | Indicative Value (p.a.) | Share |
| Power (Electricity) | $120–220M | 50–60% |
| LPG / NGL | $40–80M | 20–30% |
| Refinery Margin | $10–30M | <15% |
The refinery contributes usefully, but modestly. The real value creation in the GLIAG system lies in affordable, reliable energy for the broader economy.
9.3 IRR Dynamics
The internal rate of return for the integrated system is driven by electricity tariffs, gas pricing, capital discipline, and industrial offtake commitments. Indicative ranges:
| Scenario | Indicative IRR |
| Downside | 10–12% |
| Base Case | 14–18% |
| Upside | 18–22% |
9.4 System Resilience
A critical advantage of the GLIAG model is its structural resilience. Even in a scenario where the refinery underperforms:
• Power generation continues to create value for the economy
• LPG continues to generate revenue for households and industry
• The broader economy continues to benefit from lower energy costs
This makes the GLIAG model materially less risky than conventional refinery-led development strategies.
10. Strategic Insight — Reframing the Narrative
Many discussions about energy development begin from the wrong question. Reframing that question is essential to making strategically sound decisions.
| The Wrong Question“Should we build a refinery?” | The Right Question“How do we build an energy-driven economy?” |
Once that question is correctly framed, refining finds its appropriate place within the system — as a supporting layer, not as the strategic objective.
| CONCLUSION — BLOCK 4 |
| The GLIAG model reframes the development question: not “what do we produce?” but “what kind of economic structure do we want to build?” Energy is the foundation. Refining is a tool. Transformation is the goal. |
11. Governance — The Decisive Variable
The global history of energy projects reveals a consistent pattern: projects rarely fail for technical reasons. They fail because of weak institutions.
| The risk does NOT lie in:• Technology• Geology• Market Access | The risk lies in:GOVERNANCE |
11.1 Core Governance Risks
The primary risks are:
• Policy inconsistency between successive governments
• Lack of transparency in contracts and revenue flows
• Limited institutional capacity and technical expertise
• Unclear or unstable regulatory frameworks
These factors can lead to:
• Project delays and cost overruns
• Loss of investor confidence
• Political reprioritisation of strategic objectives
11.2 Institutional Solution — Strategic Continuity
A central prerequisite for success is the establishment of an independent national energy and development authority with a mandate to protect long-term strategy, coordinate projects across the system, and bridge political cycles.
| The authority must:• Safeguard long-term strategic objectives• Coordinate projects across all system components• Bridge political cycles and ensure continuity | Crucially, it must be:• Technically competent and professionally staffed• Operationally independent from political direction• Transparent in its reporting and decision-making |
| KEY INSIGHT |
| Without strong institutions, even the most robust economic model will fail. |
11.3 Policy Principles
An effective governance framework must be grounded in:
• Full transparency in revenue collection and public expenditure
• Clear, stable, and predictable fiscal regimes
• Consistent licensing and contract structures
• Robust protection of investor rights and legal certainty
12. Financing Strategy — From Concept to Bankability
Whether GLIAG is financeable is a critical question. The answer is yes — provided the structure is correctly designed.
12.1 Why GLIAG Is Bankable
The model exhibits three structural financial characteristics that make project finance attractive to lenders and equity investors:
| 1Stable Cashflows(Power generation) | 2Import Substitution(LPG & refined products) | 3Layered Upside(Industry & refining) |
12.2 Blended Finance Model
The optimal financing structure combines multilateral development institutions, private equity and debt investors, and public sector participation.
This combination:
• Reduces risk for all parties through distributed exposure
• Enhances the project’s credit profile and bankability
• Accelerates implementation through shared commitment
12.3 Structural Approach — Multi-SPV Model
To manage risk and protect investors, the system is structured as a series of separate Special Purpose Vehicles, each with its own risk profile and cashflow structure:
| SPV | Function |
| Gas-to-Shore | Gas transport and supply to onshore grid |
| Power | Core revenue engine — electricity generation and sales |
| Industry | Economic multiplier — industrial activation and offtake |
| Refinery | Value capture — crude processing and product sales |
Each SPV carries its own risk profile, cashflow structure, and financing partners — making the overall system modular, transparent, and bankable.
13. Strategic Roadmap — From Vision to Execution
A phased approach is essential to manage risk and build momentum. Each phase builds on the previous one, progressively reinforcing and expanding the system.
| 1 | Phase 12030–2035 | Focus:• Gas-to-Shore (initial capacity)• Electricity generation• LPG distribution infrastructureObjective:Lower energy costs and bring the system online |
| 2 | Phase 22035–2040 | Focus:• Industrial development and activation• Expansion of power generation capacity• First refinery modules commissionedObjective:Economic multiplication and industrial scale-up |
| 3 | Phase 32040+ | Focus:• Regional cooperation and integration• Product exports to regional markets• System-wide scale-up and optimisationObjective:Positioning as the regional energy hub |
14. Final Synthesis — The Strategic Choice
Suriname faces a choice that extends beyond energy policy. It is a choice about the structure of its economy — and the kind of society it intends to build.
| SimplicityExport crude oil | CautionDefer decisions | AmbitionEnergy as the foundation |
| Only the third option creates structural and lasting prosperity. |
Final Strategic Insight
The difference between success and failure does not lie in resources. It lies in the quality and courage of decisions.
Suriname possesses:
• Sufficient feedstock — offshore oil and associated gas
• Regional demand — a market that is waiting
• Strategic timing — the window is open
| Suriname does not merely possess oil.It possesses a singular opportunity to build an energy-driven economy.The question is not whether it can.The question is whether it will. |
End of Report — Suriname V3
Marcel Chin-A-Lien | Golden Lane Investments Advisory Group (GLIAG) | 25 March 2026
Confidential — Not for Distribution Without Prior Written Consent
Marcel Chin-A-Lien | Golden Lane Investments Advisory Group (GLIAG)25 March 2026Page
Independent advisory opinion. Does not represent the Government of Suriname or any policy institution.
49 Years of Transformative Expertise | Exploration, Oil & Gas Giant Fields Finder – Business Development, M&A, PSC Design, Contract Strategy
Marcel Chin-A-Lien brings nearly five decades of unmatched global expertise at the highest levels of the energy sector—where technical mastery meets business acumen to unlock and add extraordinary value.
His career has delivered multi-billion-dollar giant field discoveries, spearheaded the iconic first capitalist upstream ventures in the USSR, shaped successful offshore bid rounds, and secured enduring cash flow streams from exploration and production activities across mature and frontier basins such as the Dutch North Sea.
A rare fusion of technical, commercial, and managerial insight, Marcel holds four postgraduate petroleum degrees spanning geology, engineering, international business, and management—uniquely positioning him to bridge the worlds of exploration strategy, M&A, PSC design, and contract negotiation.
Fluent in seven languages and culturally attuned to diverse business environments, he has navigated complex geographies from Europe to Asia, Africa, and the Americas—driving innovation, de-risking investments, and aligning stakeholder interests from national oil companies to supermajors.
Whether advising on frontier basin entry, government negotiations, fiscal regime optimization, or asset valuation, Marcel’s critical insights integrate Exploration & Production with Business Development and Commercial Realism—generating sustainable growth in volatile energy markets.
For trusted advisory services at the nexus of technical excellence, commercial clarity, and geopolitical understanding, connect directly:
Public Profile: LinkedIn
Email: marcelchinalien@gmail.com
Regards, Marcel Chin-A-Lien
Guyana Suriname Basin Crude Pricing & Benchmark Strategy Guyana Lessons and Suriname Positioning Author: Marcel…
The analysis by Marcel Chin-A-Lien explores the vulnerability of the global energy system due to…
In March 2026, geopolitical tensions resemble historical patterns seen during Napoleon and Hitler’s campaigns. Marcel…
The Sloanea Gas Development Decision Framework presents three pathways for Suriname's gas monetisation: Floating LNG,…
This paper introduces a three-dimensional model of the Upper Cretaceous interval offshore Suriname, revealing systematic…
Hormuz Island, located in the Strait of Hormuz, is a geological formation revealing the ancient…