There are unmistakable indications that the more than half a century of relatively staid relations between Guyana and India are seemingly set to shift gears, with conventional diplomatic ties associated mostly with their membership of the Commonwealth now, apparently, metamorphosing into a more pragmatic relationship born out of mutual recognition that, in practical terms, each of them possess resources that are important to the other. With India it is oil. Not that the country does not possess considerable oil resources of its own. When, however, a country is ranked as the third largest consumer of oil, globally, and given the multi-faceted complexity of the contemporary oil and gas industry, enough is really never enough.