Oil
companies not running from Venezuela
By Brian Ellsworth
Reuters
CARACAS
Petroleumworld.com
04 13 06
Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez has rattled oil markets with tough anti-capitalist
talk, higher royalties and oil field takeovers, but petroleum companies
operating in the world's fifth-largest crude exporter are hardly running
scared.
With
crude prices soaring and oil reserves growing scarcer, the South American
nation is still an attractive proposition for top petroleum operators
even as the country's socialist leader demands a bigger cut of the black
gold revenues.
Chavez
has accused Big Oil of robbing the nation's resources, and last week
seized two privately operated oil fields, but global oil giants like
Chevron Corp., Royal Dutch Shell and Total are still seeking opportunities
in Venezuela.
"A
large majority of companies are willing to accept tighter terms,"
said Patrick Esteruelas, a consultant with the Eurasia Group in New
York. "Venezuela has large untapped potential reserves and oil
prices remain very high."
A
group of 16 companies this month converted subcontracting deals to joint
ventures giving state company PDVSA a majority stake even after the
government imposed tough conditions — including retroactive tax
demands and mandatory contract changes — that companies have often
considered illegal.
Venezuela
increased oil market jitters early this month by taking over fields
operated by Italy's Eni and France's Total after the companies failed
to reach an agreement to create joint ventures with PDVSA.
But
both companies later said they would avoid a legal battle, and have
signaled good will by agreeing to pay off a combined total of $126.6
million in back taxes to Venezuela.
Only
Irving-based oil giant Exxon Mobil Corp. has resisted the Chavez government's
orders, selling its stake in a small oil field operation to avoid creating
a new joint venture.
The
populist Chavez, a former paratrooper elected president in 1998, has
promised a revolution to end chronic poverty in Venezuela and has spent
billions of dollars in windfall oil income on social programs for the
country's impoverished majority.
Although
his fiery, lengthy speeches often attack the evils of capitalism, Chavez's
negotiations with oil companies have been practical and allowed him
to cut deals with multinationals.
Still,
analysts say Chavez's ambitious social program has drained much-needed
investment from the nation's oil fields.
PDVSA
says it is producing 3.3 million barrels per day, but market-watchers
including OPEC say production is only 2.6 million.
Reuters April 13, 2006, 1:36AM
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