Energy
crisis? Venezuela gas is cheaper than water
By
Brian Ellsworth
REUTERS
CARACAS
Petroleumworld.com 05 11 06
Taxi driver Jaime Tinoco works the streets of Caracas in a 1976 Chevy
Nova that guzzles 19 gallons (72 liters) of gas a day. But he doesn't
worry about fuel efficiency -- filling his tank costs just $2.30.
While U.S. consumers
struggle with soaring energy prices, Venezuela's gas is now the world's
cheapest at 12 cents a gallon and Washington's regional foe, President
Hugo Chavez, vows to maintain subsidies that keep fuel dirt-cheap.
"Those gringos
have everything -- so why does their gas cost so much?" asked Tinoco
between chuckles as he navigated a midday traffic jam. "Don't they
have oil reserves?"
Chavez, a self-proclaimed
socialist and critic of President Bush, has even begun subsidizing fuel
for poor U.S. neighborhoods as U.S. consumers brace for average summer
gas prices of $2.71 a gallon -- 34 cents higher than last summer.
In Venezuela, the
world's No. 5 oil exporter, drivers fill their tanks for less than the
price of a cheap breakfast, and love to point out that gasoline costs
less than mineral water.
The nation's gasoline
is now the world's cheapest, according to an International Monetary
Fund report released in April that shows Venezuelan gas prices as about
a third of those in oil-producing giant Saudi Arabia.
Shiny SUVs and rusty
1970s-era sedans share the streets of Venezuelan cities as drivers shrug
off fuel costs.
Low-priced fuel
is considered a birthright in Venezuela, which sells 1.2 million barrels
per day of oil to the United States -- the world's biggest gas guzzler.
"Gasoline should
stay cheap the way it is, that's why we have oil in Venezuela,"
said Maria Rosa Pinero, 55, a housewife, filling up a Volkswagen Gol
at a gas station in eastern Caracas.
Chavez has extended
Venezuela's fuel subsidy to poor Americans through a well-publicized
jab at the U.S. government that offers 40 percent discounts on heating
oil distributed by Venezuelan-owned refiner Citgo.
Flush with cash
from high oil revenues, Chavez has also shored up regional alliances
by providing low-priced fuel to Central American and Caribbean nations
he says have been snubbed by the United States.
'HOOD ROBIN' SUBSIDY
Venezuela's gas
subsidy is the subject of endless grumbling by economists who say it
promotes consumer waste and costs the state billions of dollars in lost
revenue.
Critics say the
subsidy largely benefits middle and upper-class vehicle owners at the
expense of government income that could be spent on the poor.
"They call
it the 'Hood Robin' subsidy," said Jose Luis Cordeiro, a petroleum
engineer who writes about energy issues. "Instead of stealing from
the rich to give to the poor, it's the opposite."
He estimates Venezuela
would have taken in at least an additional $8 billion last year -- almost
8 percent of the nation's GDP -- if Venezuelans had paid market rates
for fuel.
The subsidy also
encourages rampant fuel smuggling to neighboring Colombia and leads
to huge lines of Brazilian drivers waiting to fill up along the southern
border.
But past efforts
to raise gas prices have not gone well. Authorities in 1989 raised fuel
prices at the height of a recession, leading to three days of rioting
during which at least 300 people were killed. Human rights groups say
troops may have killed several thousand people.
The event marked
a turning point in Venezuelan history, and served as inspiration for
Chavez -- at the time a young army officer -- to lead a coup attempt
three years later. The coup failed but helped propel Chavez into the
presidency in 1998.
Chavez has maintained
popularity by channeling oil revenues toward social programs for the
poor, and has often criticized U.S. dependence on cheap gasoline. Washington
says he is using his oil wealth to threaten regional democracy.
At Venezuelan gas
stations, however, there are few complaints about low-cost fuel or fuel
efficiency.
"People buy
a car because it's comfortable or because it's big," said Isidro
Rodriguez, 30, an accountant, as he filled up a new 4-wheel-drive Ford
in southern Caracas. "It's not for the price of fuel, because that's
never been a problem."
Reuters
Wed May 10, 2006 3:14 PM ET
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