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Venezuela has ordered BP, Exxon and other oil and gas majors to hand back the majority rights to a massive $30 billion-worth (£15 billion) of crude projects in the country.
President Hugo Chavez announced the May Day takeover this morning as part of radical step up in his self-styled leftist revolution.
He also revealed Venezuela would pull out of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. “We will no longer have to go to Washington nor to the IMF, nor to the World Bank, not to anyone,” he said.
The huge heavy crude development spread across four projects in the Orinoco Belt region is valued at more than $30 billion and can convert about 600,000 barrels a day of heavy crude into synthetic oil.
BP, the US companies ConocoPhilips, Chevron and Exxon along with France’s Total and Norway’s Statoil have agreed formally to transfer operational control. They will retain minority stakes.
Venezuela’s state-owned PDVSA was already a partner in all four of the projects.
BP produces only around 26,000 barrels a day from its interest in the Exxon-operated Cerro Negro field in the Orinoco Belt. Its global output is nearly 4 million.
But the company has been exploring in Venezuela for a decade. On its website, it describes the country as a “land of great potential”.
A BP spokesman today said: “We continue to be in discussions with the Venezuelan ministry and PDVSA regarding other commercial matters.”
The company and its rivals are expected to be compensated for the transfer, allthough Rafael Ramirez, Venezuela’s Oil Minister, has cautioned that he will consider agreements only on the booked value of the projects rather than their much larger current net worth.
Workers celebrated the takeover in Puerto Piritu, a town near the facilities that refine crude from the Orinoco Belt, waving Venezuelan red, blue and yellow flags.
Mr Chavez, a fierce anti-US leader, is also nationalising power utilities and the country’s biggest telecoms firm.
The move comes a year after the Bolivian president Evo Morales, a leftist ally of Mr Chavez, ordered troops to seize his country’s gas fields.
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He will soon run out of businesses to rape to keep up to his showering the masses with free money. In a year or two these governement owned businesses will start to lose money and Venezuela will start to be like Cuba. By then it will be too late to throw him out. Little by little it will be an ecnomic mess. Tamara of South Africa should thank her lucky stars that she in in a country where the economy is growing. She has the best economy in Africa for crying out loud! I am always amazed at how people do not know their history.
DC Sorensen, Ely, USA
I am a South African..and love my country but despite our rainbow miracle 13 years ago...I sometimes think our problems of large scale unemployment, growing tensions around land reform and land ownership, the growing trend to privatise essential services, and the private ownership of our natural resources to faceless corporations are issues that can be resolved if our political leadership, starting with Mandela took a stronger stand to protect this country and its wealth. VIVA Chavez!
Tamara Jansen, Cape Town, South Africa
It's an extreme step that's been coming for some time. Hard as this measure seems, I understand Chavez's logic and agree with his principles.
For too long the policies of the 'donor' agencies have been imposed on 'developing' countries largely on the bidding of the industrial countries who are the proxies of big business.
Nobody cares about the socio-economic hardships and disparities caused by 'free market' initiatives; yet when political instability and widespread crime result, these very 'side-effects' are freely used to define the people of 'developing countries' as unable to to manage their affairs.
Johnny Flowers,
Kampala, Uganda
Johnny Flowers, Kampala, Uganda
Chavez wants to transform Venezuela into another Cuba, he has said so many times. If anyone wants to invest in that country, let it be known that the rules will change from one month to the next. Chavez is an unstable, mentally distubed but intelligent person. Be prepared to loose your investments should you decide to put money in Venezuela.
Chavez in a twisted way follows the steps of Fidel Castro.
Lou, Cleveland, USA
I will now avoid Chavez gas stations.
Janet, Chicago, IL
The CIA should be given full authority to take Chavez out and the US should pledge unlimited monitary and military support for a democratic opposition leader.
Chavez is a dictator who stands boldly in the face of our creator's endowment to the people of Venezuela.
We cannot allow the spread of communism in our hemisphere.
Thomas E. Reiter, Crivitz, WI
hopefully they'll flatten the tires before they hand over the keys!
Scott Evans, Los Angeles,
A mall is being built in Syracuse,NY.All the cunstruction vehicles used are fuled entirley of soy and other green fuels. All grown in the U.S.Its not much but its a start
frick n frack, central square, oswego
PDVSA is paying for Chavez's social projects and has neither the financial nor human resources to sustain the development of the Orinoco Belt.
The result will be declining production of synthetic oil and then the involvement of new partners from Iran or China to resuce the crude project.
Yet another reason why we need to reduce our dependence on oil.
David, Staines, UK
It makes one wonder if Mr. Chavez is cooking his own goose by alienating the international financial and industrial communities. If Venezuela is beset by inflationary pressures, they can probably forget about international aid, at least as long as Chavez is at the helm.
Eric S, Las Vegas, NV