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Chavez plans to more than triple
oil to China
Adrian Bradshaw/Pool/Reuters

Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez (L) toasts China's President Hu Jintao
as they attend a signing ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in
Beijing August 24, 2006.
By
Verna Yu
AFP
BEIJING
Petroleumworld.com
08 24 06
Venezuela plans to more than triple its oil exports to China over the
next five years, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said ahead of a meeting
Thursday with his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao.
"On the whole, production will increase in such a way that we will
manage to export half a million crude barrels (a day to China) in the
five next years," Chavez told Venezuelan state television in an
interview broadcast overnight.
Venezuela, the fifth biggest exporter of oil in the world, currently
delivers 150,000 barrels per day to China, compared with 1.5 million
barrels it exports to the United States.
Chavez, one of the world's most prominent critics of the United States,
repeated his intentions to make China one of his nation's biggest markets,
and so lessen Venezuela's economic dependence on Washington.
"We will convert ourselves into one of the large oil exporters
to the Chinese giant," Chavez said.
He said agreements would be signed with state-owned China National Petroleum
Corp and China Petroleum and Chemical Corp (Sinopec) on Thursday to
jointly exploit his country's oil-rich Orinoco region.
Chavez said he was excited about building a strategic alliance with
China and said the two nations were expected to sign nine agreements
on Thursday when he meets with Hu.
"We are building the future. I am very heartened -- it is our fourth
visit to China. Each visit is a step forward... that is to say, a true
alliance," he said.
Among the contracts expected to be signed are a deal to build 18 tankers
to carry Venezuelan crude to China, and 12 drilling rigs to help Venezuela
boost its production capacity.
Chavez's statements backed up his country's offer earlier this month
to export between 500,000 and one million barrels of oil a day to China
if it reached a goal of producing 5.8 million barrels of crude by 2012.
Chavez said that during his first day of his trip to China on Wednesday
he had met with company officials from the telecommunications, oil tanker
and building construction industries.
While Chavez looks to China as an alternative market to the United States,
observers have said the arrangement is beneficial to Beijing because
it wants to diversify its imports away from the volatile Middle East.
However some Chinese analysts have questioned whether the deal would
be worth it, due to the higher costs associated with Venezuelan oil.
Aside from the extra expense of the long distance the oil would have
to be shipped, Venezuelan crude is heavier than most of the Middle Eastern
varieties, making it more costly to refine.
As well as looking to broker energy deals, Chavez took time out on Wednesday
to hail China's economic model as an alternative to the US capitalist
approach.
Chavez praised China for being able, in less than half a century, to
leave behind a
"practically feudal" society and turn itself into one of the
world's largest economies.
"It's an example for western leaders and governments that claim
capitalism is the only alternative," he said.
"We've been manipulated to believe that the first man on the moon
was the most important event of the 20th century.
"But no, much more important things happened, and one of the greatest
events of the 20th century was the Chinese revolution."
Chavez is due to meet with Hu around 5:00 pm (0900 GMT) at the Great
Hall of the People in Beijing.
After his six-day China trip, Chavez will travel to Malaysia and Angola.
AFP
24 0453 GMT 08 06
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France Presse.
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