Guide Governance Intermediate 30 min read

Guyana Beneficial Ownership Transparency (BOT) Report 2024

Guyana's official Beneficial Ownership Transparency report establishes the corporate ownership disclosure standards that businesses must meet — a cornerstone of governance compliance in Guyana's extractive sector and beyond.

Governance: The Foundation of Business Credibility

The Governance (G) pillar of ESG is consistently ranked by lenders and international partners as the most important for SMEs — because it directly affects trust. Good governance means that your business operates transparently, is accountable for its decisions, and has systems in place to prevent fraud and mismanagement.

In Guyana's rapidly growing economy, governance standards are tightening. The government has moved decisively to improve corporate transparency, and international investors and lenders are aligning their requirements accordingly.


Beneficial Ownership Transparency in Guyana

What It Is

Beneficial ownership refers to the real individuals who ultimately own or control a business — not just the names on company registration documents. Guyana's Beneficial Ownership Transparency (BOT) Register requires companies in key sectors to declare who their beneficial owners are.

Why It Matters

The BOT register exists to combat money laundering, corruption, and the use of shell companies to obscure illicit financial flows. For businesses that want to participate in Guyana's oil and gas supply chain, access development finance, or enter contracts with international partners, BOT compliance is a direct requirement.

International development banks — including the IDB, CDB, and World Bank Group — require borrowers and partners to have verifiable, transparent ownership structures. A business that cannot clearly demonstrate who owns it will face obstacles at every stage of formal financing.

What Is Required

  • Declaration of beneficial owners — individuals owning 25% or more of shares or voting rights, or who otherwise exercise control
  • Up-to-date registration — the register must reflect current ownership; changes must be reported
  • Accurate documentation — supporting evidence of ownership structure

Core Governance Frameworks for Guyanese SMEs

Good governance is built on four foundations: transparency, accountability, compliance, and integrity.

1. Corporate Registration and Compliance

Your business should be properly registered with the Deeds Registry and maintain current status:

  • Certificate of Incorporation and Annual Returns up to date
  • Tax Identification Number (TIN) registered and in good standing
  • VAT registration if applicable
  • Sector-specific licences current and documented

2. Financial Transparency

Lenders and partners assess governance primarily through financial records:

  • Two to three years of financial statements — profit and loss, balance sheet
  • Audited accounts where possible, or at minimum certified by an accountant
  • Separation of business and personal finances — a business bank account is the minimum requirement
  • Clear records of all transactions — invoices, receipts, contracts, bank statements

3. Anti-Corruption and Ethics

International partners require evidence that businesses operate with integrity:

  • A simple written anti-corruption policy (one to two pages) stating your commitment to ethical business practice
  • A conflict of interest policy for directors and senior staff
  • Clear procurement procedures for how you select suppliers and contractors
  • Records showing that contracts are awarded fairly and transparently

4. Management Accountability

  • Board or management oversight — documented decision-making processes
  • Delegation of authority — written records of who is authorised to commit the business to contracts or expenditure
  • Meeting records — minutes of key decisions, even for small businesses

Governance and the Oil and Gas Supply Chain

ExxonMobil, SLB, and other operators running pre-qualification processes in Guyana require suppliers to demonstrate governance compliance as part of vendor registration. This typically includes:

  • Proof of ownership structure and beneficial ownership disclosure
  • Signed anti-bribery and anti-corruption declarations
  • Evidence of financial management practices
  • Corporate governance documentation

The Local Content Act reinforces these requirements: businesses seeking to qualify as local content providers must demonstrate operational credibility that governance documentation directly supports.


Practical First Steps

This week:

  • Confirm your beneficial ownership is registered and current
  • Check that your Annual Returns are filed and your company registration is active

This month:

  • Organise your financial records into a simple file — at minimum the last two years of accounts
  • Write a one-page anti-corruption policy for your business

This quarter:

  • Open a dedicated business bank account if you don't already have one
  • Create a simple contracts register documenting all active agreements

The BOT Report Reference

The Guyana BOT 2024 Report documents the progress and scope of Guyana's beneficial ownership transparency initiative, including which sectors are covered and what disclosure standards apply. It is the authoritative reference for businesses that need to understand their BOT obligations.

The report is available below for download.

Related Document Guyana Bot Report 2024
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