OPEC
meeting gives Chavez center stage
CBS
CARACAS
Petroleumworld.com
06 20 06
OPEC meetings usually are held in the Middle East or in Europe. But
this year, OPEC is meeting in Caracas, Venezuela, giving Venezuelan
president Hugo Chavez an opportunity to grab the spotlight. As CBS News
correspondent Trish Regan reports, Chavez is pushing for cuts in oil
production in hopes that energy prices move even higher than the current
$70-plus per barrel.
Chavez
has been dubbed Irritant-in-Chief to President Bush. His hero is none
other than Cuba's Fidel Castro. Beginning on Thursday, Chavez gets his
best opportunity yet to challenge the United States when he hosts the
world's oil producers at an OPEC conference.
"I
expect the rhetoric I expect to be flying out of President Chavez on
all fronts," says John Kilduff, an oil analyst at commodities trading
firm Fimat USA. "He'll make the argument that the Western economies
have grown to the place they are on the back of cheap oil, and that
it's time for the oil-producing countries to get their just desserts."
Venezuela
could be in for a second helping: It's already home to the largest proven
oil reserves in the Western Hemisphere — nearly 80 billion barrels
— and there's potential to pump even more. Much more.
Elio
Ohep, editor of Petroleum World Web site, says the recent run-up in
petroleum prices makes the oil in Venezuela's Orinoco region, once considered
too expensive to extract because it's so heavy, thick and expensive
to refine, suddenly worthwhile.
"That
would be huge amounts and will guarantee the world that the oil is there
for the future," he says. The oil in the Orinoco region isn't profitable
to get out of the ground at $20 a barrel, but at $50 a barrel, he says,
it's "very commercial. You have to invest huge amounts of money,
but at $50 a barrel, it's very good."
These
days, oil is now hovering around $70 a barrel. Chavez will push OPEC
to set $50 a barrel as the new rock-bottom price. As Venezuela's energy
minister, Rafael Ramirez, told CBS News, it's not just OPEC that sets
the price of oil — but world politics, too.
"The
price is higher than $50 [a barrel] at the moment, and has nothing to
do with OPEC and the supply market," Ramirez says.
From
an American perspective, Chavez himself is one of those political dangers.
His anti-U.S. rhetoric has contributed to the run-up in oil prices.
At the meeting, Chavez will push OPEC to keep prices high by cutting
oil production. He's unlikely to win the argument for a production cut,
but he will win the world's attention — and another opportunity
to irritate the United States.
CBS News 05 31 06
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