Venezuela
consolidates oil industry control as US giants pull out
AFP
CARACAS
Petroleumworld.com
06 28 07
Venezuela moved closer to nationalizing its oil-rich
Orinoco River basin, after four foreign oil companies signed deals giving Venezuela
the lion's share of the profits and two US companies pulled out altogether.
"ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips are ending their participation in the exploration
ventures," Oil and Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez said Tuesday at the signing
ceremony with France's Total, Norway's Statoil, British Petroleum and US company
Chevron.
The state-run oil company Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) said it had raised its
share in the exploration ventures from an average 39 percent to 78 percent in
the deals.
The United States immediately issued a statement calling on Venezuela to abide
by its international commitments, and demanded "fair and just" compensation
for the two US companies' interests.
The move to increase the state's participation in the Orinoco ventures is part
of a wide-ranging nationalization drive firebrand President Hugo Chavez launched
in January that so far has included the telecommunications and electricity sectors,
the takeover of idle land and tighter controls over the private health sector.
Venezuela, Latin America's only member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC), hopes to certify by 2008 that the Orinoco region has oil reserves
of 1.3 trillion barrels, 20 percent of which can be extracted with current technology.
The fuel is a highly viscous, extra-heavy crude which needs special processing
to turn it into synthetic oil before it can be refined.
In the past, the big oil companies paid only one percent in royalties for the
Orinoco crude they extracted, adducing the high cost of processing the fuel.
After Chavez was elected in 1998, royalties increased to 33.2 percent, while
taxes went up from 34 percent to 50 percent.
US oil giant ConocoPhillips had an interest in the Petrozuata heavy-oil venture,
and ExxonMobil had a concession in the Ceiba oil block.
"Based on the negotiations that were conducted, the (now-)extinct Petrozuata
strategic association and the La Ceiba exploration block have come under the
control of PDVSA," the state-run oil company said.
US State Department spokesman Tom Casey said Venezuela "like any other government,
has the right to make these kinds of decisions to change ownership rules or other
kinds of regulations."
However, he added, the United States expects Venezuela to comply with international
agreements "in terms of providing fair and just compensation in accordance
with international standards for any property that does come under government
ownership or otherwise changes hands as a result of this."
Ramirez said that PDVSA would not seek new partnerships to replace ExxonMobil
and ConocoPhillips. "We really feel very comfortable with Venezuela taking
over those concerns," he said.
The Chavez administration had imposed a June 26 dateline for foreign oil companies
with interests in Venezuela to agree to PDVSA's terms.
Ramirez said, however, that under an informal agreement, negotiations with Exxonmobil
and ConocoPhillips were continuing over the terms of their pullout.
Venezuela's National Assembly is expected to ratify all Orinoco contracts on
August 26.
Venezuela has offered payment in cash or oil for assets it takes over from the
oil companies that are staying in Venezuela, a PDVSA source told AFP.
US market analysts predicted a drop in oil revenues for Venezuela as foreign
companies pull out or reduce their investment in less-profitable ventures.
"If all the foreign oil companies leave, the Venezuelan oil industry will
be in a shamble ... this will be the beginning of the end of Hugo's regime," said
Alaron market analyst Phil Flynn in New York.
Venezuela first nationalized its oil industry in 1976 under president Carlos
Andres Perez (1974-1979), who then reversed the process in 1992 during his second
term (1989-1993). After his reelection in 2000, Chavez began raising royalties
and taxes on foreign oil companies
According to OPEC, Venezuela's oil quota is 3.2 million barrels a day, but over
the past few years it has dropped to 2.6 million barrels, of which 1.8 million
is exported to the United States.
AFP 27 0109 GMT 06 07
Copyright© 2007
AFP. All
Rights Reserved.
Send
this story to a friend
Your
feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write
to editor@petroleumworld.com
Any
question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com
Best
Viewed with IE
5.01+
Windows
NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels
|