M. Ron Wahid/
WT:
Venezuela's takeover
Sometimes it seems as though the United States must
face the increasingly authoritarian regime of Hugo Chavez
in Venezuela alone.
Having centralized power, developed a close alliance
with Cuba, rigged elections and even harassed the American
ambassador when he tried to deliver baseball equipment
to a poor community in Caracas, the Chavez government
is steering a course of economic autarky and political
repression.Whileother Latin American countries are (quietly)
deeply concerned about the course of events in Venezuela,
the United States has been a lonely public voice in
the international community calling attention to the
abuses of the Chavez regime and the harassment of the
political opposition.
Now, with oil above $70 a barrel, the Venezuelan government
is continuing its efforts to take over oil operations
of foreign companies by stealth and political pressure.
Among other things, the changes provide that foreign
operators can only hold minority stakes in Venezuelan
operations, must sell certain interests to the state
and can no longer appeal to foreign courts for redress
in commercial disputes.
Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez has already said that ExxonMobil
is no longer welcome in Venezuela, for having rejected
the demand for a forced sale of its majority interests
in Venezuelan operations. Now the government is turning
its attention to European operators.
On April 3, the Venezuelan national oil company PDVSA
informed the Italian oil giant ENI that ENI's operating
service contract on hydrocarbon activities in the Dacion
field southeast of Caracas was unilaterally terminated
and that all management of the operations must be transferred
to personnel approved by PDVSA (in effect, a purge of
any supporters of the opposition to Mr. Chavez). To
step up pressure on ENI, the Venezuelan government claimed
on April 21 that the company owes $68 million in back
taxes and must pay "no matter what," according
to a recent article in Business Week. A court froze
ENI's assets in Venezuela to prohibit the company from
repatriating funds to its home.
Venezuela has taken similar actions against operations
of the French company Total, and the Norwegian state
oil company Statoil is reportedly looking to sell some
of its operations there.
PDVSA -- already the target of a purge putting the company
into the hands of Chavez supporters -- is pursuing these
objectives at the behest of Mr. Chavez.
Politicizing the management of oil operations won't
get a single barrel of additional oil out of the ground,
but it will serve to weaken performance of the fields.
Foreign companies have sought out the best Venezuelans
for these jobs and trained future leaders of the country.
It's unsurprising that many Venezuelans who work in
the oil fields see the dangers of the Chavez government's
economic policies.
It's also worth remembering that PDVSA is an active
participant in the downstream market in the United States
through its ownership of Citgo service stations. But
while Venezuela is happy to take money from American
motorists, it does not want the benefit of real, mutually
advantageous foreign investment in the country. Rather,
it wants to skew the terms of investment sharply in
its own favor.
Under international law, a nation has the clear right
to nationalize or expropriate property provided that
the taking is for a public purpose and that just compensation
is paid. Neither exception applies here. ENI is offering
Venezuela a reasonable period of time in which a full
reparation of ENI's contract rights can be agreed between
the parties. But if an agreement cannot be reached,
ENI will pursue legal action to claim its rights, as
it is entitled to do. That appeal to the rule of law,
however, was greeted with stepped up pressure on the
company to settle an unfair tax claim.
What does it say about a country when ideology and economicnationalism
trump the desire to take advantage of high oil prices
and encourage investment that will benefit the people
of Venezuela?
Perhaps Venezuela believes that high oil prices permit
it to ignore international law and normal international
commercial behavior. Evidently, Venezuela simply does
not care about its reputation as a destination for foreign
investment -- it wants to force a new economic reality
based on solidarity with the developing world, even
if that means missing a genuine opportunity for economic
development for its people.
With Romano Prodi's new government about to take power
in Rome, the question becomes whether that government
will be more interested in supporting the legitimate
rights of Italian companies or pleasing its members
on the left who revel in "solidarity" with
the developing world and enjoy seeing Mr. Chavez taunt
the United States.
American and European consumers looking for relief from
high gasoline prices, as well as Venezuelan citizens
suffering from poor economic policies, are anxiously
awaiting the answer.
M. Ron Wahid
is president and CEO of RJI Capital Corp.
Petroleumworld not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
Note: This commentary was originally published in by
The Washington Times, on 05/10/2006. Petroleumworld
reprint this article in the interest of our readers.
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Petroleumworld
05/11/06
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©2006 M. Ron Wahid. All Rights Reserved.