Energy & Commodities · French Guiana
—The refusal. TotalEnergies chief Patrick Pouyanné told French lawmakers on June 17 that the company will not drill new exploration wells off French Guiana.
—The timing. France’s parliament is weighing a bill to lift a 2017 law that bans oil exploration across French territory, including its overseas regions.
—The sunk cost. Total says it already spent close to four hundred million euros, around $460m, off French Guiana and found only non-commercial volumes.
—The geology. Pouyanné insists the rich Guyana-Suriname basin and the French Guiana basin are separate and unconnected, so neighbouring success proves nothing.
—The contrast. Guyana and Suriname are riding a historic offshore boom, while the one stretch of the region on European Union soil sits idle.
—Why it matters. A supermajor walking away undercuts hopes that an oil windfall could one day fund a poor French region of South America.
The story of French Guiana oil is a rare one in 2026: a corner of the world’s hottest exploration region where the energy giant in charge says it would rather not look, even as Paris prepares to let it.
Why French Guiana oil is suddenly in the news
French Guiana is a French overseas region on the northern shoulder of South America, sitting between Suriname and Brazil. That places it on the edge of the offshore zone that has made its neighbours some of the most talked-about oil stories in the world.
So when the head of France’s energy champion told parliament he would not drill there, it landed hard. Local politicians have been pushing for years to tap oil they feel their neighbours are enjoying while they are left out.
What Pouyanné actually said
Speaking to the finance committee of the National Assembly on June 17, TotalEnergies chief executive Patrick Pouyanné was blunt. Asked whether the company was ready to drill again in French Guiana, he answered simply that it was not.
He said Total had already spent close to four hundred million euros, about $460m, on past exploration there. The drilling did find some hydrocarbons, but in quantities far too small to be worth producing.
His last exploration permit lapsed in 2019 without a commercial result. The company, he made clear, will not put fresh money into new wells.
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Jun 19, 2026 · 14:50
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| SUGAR | 14.14 | +2.09% | -12.17% | 13.85 | 14.50 | 14.10 | — |
| COCOA | 4,362 | +5.26% | -48.43% | 4,144 | 4,264 | 4,077 | — |
| ORANGE JUICE | 158.20 | +6.28% | -32.16% | 148.85 | 158.85 | 147.05 | — |
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COFFEE
256.10
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ORANGE JUICE
158.20
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CORN
444.25
+5.52%
COCOA
4,362
+5.26%
BEEF
246.75
-3.51%
COTTON
79.33
+3.16%
SUGAR
14.14
+2.09%
SILVER
64.91
-2.03%
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The Brent crude rose 0.93%, with breadth negative — 7 of 15 names higher. ORANGE JUICE led, while COFFEE lagged.
From The Rio Times
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A ban that Paris may lift
The refusal is striking because the legal door is swinging the other way. A 2017 French law banned new oil and gas exploration across French territory, and that ban currently covers French Guiana.
Now parliament is debating a bill, pushed by Guianese senator Georges Patient, to lift the ban in France’s overseas regions. Local deputies back a restart, hoping oil revenue could fund a territory that remains far poorer than mainland France.
The politics are sharp. The ecology minister, Monique Barbut, pointedly asked that if Total would not drill, who should be invited in instead.
For some local leaders the question is tied to a bigger one about self-rule. Deputies who back drilling also want more autonomy for the territory, so that any future oil money would help fund French Guiana directly.
The frustration is easy to understand from the map. Brazil, Suriname and Guyana have all moved into offshore production or advanced exploration, and many Guianese feel cut out of a windfall arriving on every side of them.
The geology argument
At the heart of Total’s position is a point about rock, not politics. Pouyanné argues that the prolific basin shared by Guyana and Suriname and the basin off French Guiana are two separate, unconnected systems.
In his telling, striking oil next door says nothing about what lies beneath French waters. The company is waiting on data from Brazil’s Petrobras, which is exploring on the Brazilian side, before forming any further view.
That caution is grounded in costly experience. An earlier round of drilling that pushed close to the maritime border with Suriname came back, in the company’s own description, completely negative.
Why it matters for investors
The episode shows how geology and corporate discipline can override even strong political will. A government can lift a ban, but it cannot force a company to spend on a prospect it judges poor.
For anyone tracking the region, the read is that the Guyana-Suriname boom does not automatically spill across every nearby border. Each basin stands on its own technical merits.
There is also a long clock at work. Officials note that drilling and development could take around fifteen years to reach first oil, so even a yes today would be a bet on the late 2030s and beyond.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why won’t TotalEnergies drill for French Guiana oil?
The company says it already spent close to four hundred million euros there and found only non-commercial volumes. Its chief executive told French lawmakers the chances of success are extremely low, so it will not fund new wells.
Isn’t French Guiana next to the big Guyana oil discoveries?
It is geographically close, but Total argues the geology is separate. In its view the rich Guyana-Suriname basin and the French Guiana basin are two unconnected systems, so a find in one does not predict oil in the other.
Is French Guiana allowed to produce oil at all?
Not under current law, which has banned new exploration on French territory since 2017. France’s parliament is now debating a bill to lift that ban in its overseas regions, which would clear the legal path even if no company chooses to drill.
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By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-19 17:56:49 | Updated at 2026-06-19 19:41:24
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