Chavez
drives a hard bargain, but Big Oil's options are limited
By
Robert Collier
San Francisco Chronicle
El Tigre, Venezuela
Petroleumworld.com
09 24 06
On
the hot, shrub-covered plains around this dusty, dingy town, an odd
courtship is being carried out between the world's most prominent revolutionary
and the world's biggest oil companies.
Just as there is
no love between President Hugo Chavez and the Bush administration, there
is little love lost between Chavez and the foreign oilmen who are pumping
up the huge reservoirs of underground oil. But they need each other.
The United States needs Venezuela to help quench its bottomless thirst
for oil, and Chavez needs America to buy it from him in order to fund
his dreams of spreading his leftist ideology around the hemisphere.
The stakes here
are huge. The area around El Tigre, known as the Orinoco Oil Belt, possesses
the world's biggest petroleum reserves -- 1.3 trillion barrels of so-called
extra-heavy oil. Chevron, Exxon Mobil, ConocoPhillips and dozens of
other foreign firms are here, using recently developed technologies
to extract the tarlike, sulfurous crude and refine it.
"Everyone agrees
that the Orinoco Belt has the biggest reserves in the world," said
Alberto Quiros, a Chavez critic and former president of Royal Dutch
Shell's Venezuela operations. "What Chavez will do with them is
another question, but there's no doubt that Venezuela will take Saudi
Arabia's place as No. 1."
Chavez already is
forcing Chevron, which is based in San Ramon, and other oil companies
to swallow some bitter pills.
In the past two
years, he has raised foreign oil companies' corporate income tax to
50 percent from 30 percent and increased royalties payable to the government
from as low as 1 percent to 33 percent. After he threatened to confiscate
their operations elsewhere in Venezuela, 26 foreign oil companies, including
Chevron, agreed earlier this year to convert their operations into joint
ventures with the state-owned Petroleos de Venezuela (known as Pdvsa),
with the government holding the majority share. Two European firms --
Total of France and ENI of Italy -- refused, and Chavez promptly expelled
them.
Now, the government
is demanding similar concessions at the four Orinoco Belt operations,
in which Chevron, Exxon Mobil and others have invested about $17 billion.
The government is demanding that Pdvsa's ownership share of the projects
be increased from an average of 40 percent to at least 51 percent and
that Pdvsa take over operational control of the oilfields.
Negotiations over
these demands are coming to a head, and the outcome may influence whether
Venezuela's rising tensions with Washington subside or even escalate.
Analysts say foreign companies may seek international arbitration to
block Chavez's takeover attempt.
"It will be
quite a fight," said Gersan Zurita, an oil-industry analyst with
credit evaluator Fitch Ratings in New York, which advises investors
who have purchased $3.9 billion in bonds for the Orinoco Belt projects.
In June, Fitch Ratings downgraded the projects' credit scores, saying
Chavez's demands could damage the projects' viability.
But for Chavez,
it's a matter of national pride -- and political bragging points. Around
the country, the government has put up posters and billboards showing
Chavez extending his arms in a victory salute, accompanied by the slogan,
"Full oil sovereignty: Joint ventures -- more benefits for the
people!"
As top-secret negotiations
begin, all sides in the conflict have tried to keep a low profile. Chevron,
Exxon and ConocoPhillips declined Chronicle requests to interview their
officials and to visit their installations in Venezuela.
Zurita said the
companies fear being blacklisted by Chavez and losing out on future
oil deals.
"It's a very
delicate situation. It involves more than just these contracts. Any
comment by any of these companies could be used by the government to
demand more concessions," Zurita said. "The biggest incentive
(for the companies) is to preserve access for the future. These are
enormous reserves."
Luis Giusti, president
of Pdvsa from 1994 to 1999, noted that many companies have little choice
but to look to Venezuela because their reserves elsewhere are dwindling
and their access to the Middle East is limited by the firm grip of those
nations' government monopolies.
"The foreign
companies will accept his conditions because they have so much capital
sunk there, and they can't afford a confrontation with the government,"
said Giusti, who during his time at Pdvsa championed many of the privatization
policies that Chavez is now reversing.
For its part, the
government seems to have adopted a bunker mentality. Pdvsa's Caracas
headquarters declined a Chronicle request to interview its officials
or to visit its facilities. One official said that all visits were suspended
"for security reasons" after a July 17 fire damaged the country's
largest oil refinery, at Amuay in the northwest -- a sign that the government
is nervous about the company's high rate of accidents, which it blames
partially on sabotage by U.S.-inspired domestic opposition groups.
The only government
official willing to talk about the subject was Fadi Kabboul, the oil
attache at Venezuela's embassy in Washington.
"For the market,
the Orinoco extra-heavy oil operations are very profitable, and they
will continue being very profitable. There will be ever-greater interest
and participation by foreign companies," Kabboul said.
The Orinoco conflict
carries echoes of the knock-down, drag-out battle for control that erupted
in December 2002, after Chavez ordered Pdvsa to directly fund and operate
major social-welfare projects in poor communities. The company's executives,
engineers, technicians and ship captains accused Chavez of "politicizing"
Pdvsa, went on strike and shut down almost all operations for three
months.
The strikers had
hoped to topple Chavez by reviving a military-civilian coup effort that
overthrew Chavez for two days in April 2002. But Chavez defeated the
strike and fired 18,000 of the strikers -- about 90 percent of Pdvsa's
white-collar workforce. The company is still struggling to recover,
and most energy analysts believe that Pdvsa's production is only one-half
of its pre-strike level. Nevertheless, Chavez's oil revenue has been
buoyed by the increase of production by foreign companies, which has
risen from 400,000 barrels per day to 620,000 per day, and the more-than-doubling
of international oil prices.
In El Tigre, dozens
of fired Pdvsa employees gather every day at 3 p.m. in a neighborhood
park to exchange job tips and speculate hopefully about Chavez's downfall.
"This could
be the issue that finally forces the Bush administration to take a stronger
stand against Chavez," said Antonio Cardona, a former director
of Pdvsa's crude pumping operations for the region. "Foreign companies
have been afraid of Chavez, and they're staying just so they don't lose
all they have invested, but he may have finally overplayed his hand
now."
Cardona said he
worked for Pdvsa for 20 years until he joined the strike. Three and
a half years later, like his fellow strikers, Cardona is blacklisted
throughout the oil industry by Pdvsa, which prohibits even private companies
from hiring any ex-striker. Cardona must scrabble for work, doing small
engineering jobs for private-sector construction projects.
At the same time,
Chavez has begun shifting oil exports away from the United States, where
Venezuelan crude is the fifth-largest foreign source of petroleum. During
the first half of 2006, Venezuelan oil exports to the United States
dropped by approximately 6 percent from the year before to about 1.3
million barrels per day, according to U.S. Energy Department figures.
At the same time,
Chavez has struck oil deals with Beijing, including $5 billion of Chinese
investments in Venezuelan energy projects by 2012. Venezuela's exports
to China, while still relatively small at 150,000 barrels per day, are
projected to reach 500,000 barrels by 2010.
Chevron may wind
up playing an unwilling role in Chavez's most audacious plan -- construction
of a 5,700-mile natural-gas pipeline through South America. The proposed
$25 billion project, the central element of Chavez's plan to unify the
continent's economies, would start in the eastern Venezuelan city of
Puerto Ordaz, slice through Brazil's Amazon jungle and end in Argentina,
with trunk lines to Peru, Bolivia and Chile.
Chevron is already
a major player in helping Venezuela exploit its offshore natural gas
deposits in the Caribbean and Atlantic, which at 151 trillion square
feet are the eighth-largest proven reserves in the world. Recently,
Venezuelan officials have suggested that despite prior understandings
that Chevron would be allowed to convert the production from its Deltana
field in the Atlantic into liquefied natural gas and export it to the
United States, this supply will instead be sent south via the new pipeline
-- whether Chevron likes it or not.
Some experts scoff
at Chavez's pipeline idea. "It's a very large and very costly project,"
said Giusti. "It will never be built to transport reserves of gas
that don't exist to markets that don't exist."
Other analysts call
it far-thinking. A recent study by the Latin American Energy Organization,
a regional alliance headquartered in Quito, Ecuador, concluded that
Chavez's pipelines could save the area's governments $100 billion over
the next 20 years by lowering imports of liquid natural gas from Asia
and Africa.
One smaller project
is already under construction -- a 140-mile gas pipeline linking Venezuela
to Colombia, with an extension planned to Panama.
In El Tigre, a sprawling
small city of 150,000 in Anzoategui state, there is little evidence
of the nearby oil bonanza. Main streets are nondescript, and the highways
leading out into the surrounding savanna are narrow and potholed.
But billboards are
everywhere touting Chavez and the state's governor, Tarek William Saab.
"With Tarek
and Chavez, Anzoategui is progressing!" blare the signs, showing
a triumphant Chavez leading a slightly sheepish governor, both wearing
revolutionary-red shirts and surrounded by cheering crowds.
But even many Chavez
supporters complain that the president's grand ambitions have not benefited
the people of Anzoategui.
"Because of
oil we have everything, yet we have nothing," said El Tigre Mayor
Ernesto Paraqueima, a member of Chavez's ruling coalition.
Speaking in his
simple office in El Tigre's concrete-block municipal building as a broken
sprinkler downstairs coated the windows with water, he bitterly criticized
what he said was the waste of huge sums of money.
"The bureaucracy
is enormous, and corruption is gigantic," Paraqueima said. "Anzoategui
is a rich state, with rich land. You can look on either side of any
highway in Anzoategui, and you won't see anything being cultivated anywhere.
That's because of oil. We prefer to bring rice and potatoes from Colombia
than growing it here. We produce almost nothing but oil.
"Every foreign
oil company in the world is here, but where is the benefit?"
Chavez's oil money
In
the past three years, as international oil prices have soared, Chavez
has eliminated his political opposition's influence over government
finances and drawn a tight curtain of secrecy around them.
In 2003, after the
opposition led a chaotic strike by executives and technicians at the
state-owned, yet formerly autonomous, oil company Petroleos de Venezuela,
or Pdvsa, Chavez fired 18,000 of the white-collar strikers. In 2005,
Chavez gained full control of the formerly independent Central Bank,
and opposition parties' boycott of legislative elections gave his coalition
all 167 seats in Congress that December.
Even Citgo, the
U.S. refiner and gas retailer wholly owned by Pdvsa, earlier this year
paid off all its debt and stopped the routine practice of reporting
data to Moody's financial service -- thus ending all outside scrutiny
of the company's books.
What's more, much
of Venezuela's oil revenue now stays outside the government's budgetary
channels. In recent years, Congress has set each year's government budget
by setting Pdvsa's tax payments artificially low. This year, for example,
Pdvsa's taxes are pegged to a price of $26 per barrel for Venezuela's
blend of heavy crudes -- which currently sells for $58. The $32 per
barrel difference remains largely off-budget, with no legislative supervision
or disclosure of line-item details.
Documents released
by the government earlier this month showed oil revenues of $49 billion
for Pdvsa in the first six months of 2006, a 21 percent increase from
the same period last year.
In
Caracas, Pdvsa declined to make officials available to The Chronicle
for an interview.
E-mail Robert Collier
at rcollier@sfchronicle.com.
San
Francisco Chronicle 24 09 06
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