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Caribbean-Latin America
Venezuela gives Exxon ultimatum
2005-12-20
Venezuela has given the world's biggest oil company, ExxonMobil, until the end of this year to enter a joint venture with the state. Failure to do so will almost certainly result in Exxon losing its oil field concessions in the country.

Venezuela's socialist government has now signed new agreements with almost all foreign petroleum companies. After months of pressure from left- wing leader Hugo Chavez most foreign oil firms working there have caved in. They have agreed to hand over a controlling stake of their oil interests to the Venezuelan state.
It's either that, or loose everything when he grabs the whole thing "for the people"
This means that Venezuela, which has the world's largest petroleum reserves, now calls the shots in what the foreign guests can and cannot do. In addition, the companies which have signed the new contracts - such as Chevron, BP, Shell and Total - will in future be presented with much higher tax bills by the government. But Venezuela says it is only fair that the foreigners are made to pay up as they have got away lightly in the past.

Much of the oil revenue in Venezuela goes into social projects in shanty towns and poor rural areas.
That, and weapons purchases, supporting revolutionary movements in neighboring countries, etc

But the US oil giant, ExxonMobil, is digging in its heels and is so far refusing to agree to the terms of the new deal. Exxon risks losing Venezuelan operations if it fails to comply.
Chancing a quick death rather than slow bleeding
There is growing unease among foreign energy companies based Latin America that they may be forced to become junior partners by a string of left wing governments. In the case of Bolivia and the apparent shift to the left there following elections on Sunday, it is possible that the new government will decide to follow Venezuela's example and renegotiate oil and gas contracts with foreign investors.
Posted by:Steve

#8  How large their reserves are is strongly dependent on what you count as reserves: Venezuela has HUGE amounts of very heavy oil ('tar sands') - at current prices these are economic reserves (exploitation of similar Canadian deposits is accelerating.) I am not aware of any similar tar sands in Saudi Arabia, so Venezuela actually may have the largest reserves - with Canada second (I am not sure though
Posted by: Glenmore   2005-12-20 16:28  

#7  Two or three United States Marines, MRE's for a week or two, some C&W CD's, a radio and AV-8B Harrier support should do it nicely.
Posted by: Besoeker   2005-12-20 13:57  

#6  ...Put a platoon of Marines on each Exxon site, then tell the Venezuelans to come and get it. Betcha they reoconsider.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2005-12-20 13:30  

#5  Which is why all good Americans should cut their gas usage and why we need to exploit alternative energies now.

Why negotiate when you can eventually ignore.
Posted by: Penguin   2005-12-20 11:46  

#4  BA nails it. BBC BS - no fact checking. I expect they meant in South America.
Posted by: Alpha Spemble1220   2005-12-20 10:34  

#3  This means that Venezuela, which has the world's largest petroleum reserves, now calls the shots in what the foreign guests can and cannot do.

I call BS. I thought Soodi land and Kuwait had the world's largest reserves. Actually, a chart I have showing 2004 estimates of PROVEN reserves shows Venezuela as #6 in the world (behind, in order: Saudi, Iran, Iraq, U.A.E., Kuwait). You add in oil from tar sands, and Canda jumps in there too (actually, right behind Saudi in that case).
Posted by: BA   2005-12-20 09:56  

#2  The Venezuelan state has a lot of assets in the US (Citgo, refineries) that can be siezed in compensation.
Posted by: ed   2005-12-20 09:42  

#1  Venezuela nationalized foreign oil interests (or at least Gulf Oil Co. interests) some 40 years ago, at roughly the same time Kuwait did. I guess they're doing it again, though it didn't seem to do them much good the last time.
Posted by: Glenmore   2005-12-20 09:02  

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