| PDVSA's
Collapse
Source: Stratfor; National
and International newspapers; and others
Related articles, click here
18 de Mayo de 2005
PDVSA'S Collapse, Stratfor - May
17, 2005
Summary
Venezuela's government claims that its oil industry
is producing more than 3.3 million barrels per day,
but new estimates confirm Stratfor's two-year-old
forecast that Petroleos de Venezuela's crude oil production
capacity is collapsing. Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez needs a healthy oil industry to keep his revolution
afloat financially. However, his escalating threats
and bullying tactics against foreign oil companies
are discouraging critically needed oil and gas investments.
Analysis
Petroleos de Venezuela's (PDVSA) net crude oil production
has dropped to 1.35 million barrels per day (bpd),
says Jose Guerra, a former chief economist for the
Venezuelan Central Bank. This estimate does not include
about 1 million bpd produced by foreign oil companies
under four so-called "strategic associations"
in the Orinoco heavy oil belt and 32 recently nullified
marginal oilfield operating contracts. Separately,
Sergio Gabrielli, finance director of Brazilian oil
company Petroleo Brasileiro SA (Petrobras), told Spanish
news agency EFE in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on May
17 that Petrobras is "studying the situation"
before making decisions about its future in Venezuela.
The government of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez
has repeatedly claimed since early 2003 that Venezuela's
oil production averages 3.3 million bpd. However,
Stratfor has argued since 2003 that Venezuela's crude
oil production capacity is plummeting because of poor
management at PDVSA and insufficient investment since
Chavez seized full control of the company. Now, the
extent of the collapse in PDVSA's crude oil production
capacity has become too great for the Chavez government
to hide.
The government's official numbers on PDVSA simply
do not add up when official crude oil production levels
are compared with dollar revenues deposited by PDVSA
at the Venezuelan Central Bank. Guerra argues that
the discrepancy results from the government's failure
to tell the truth about PDVSA's true crude oil production
levels.
Guerra said May 16 that if the government's assertion
that Venezuela is producing 3.3 million bpd is truthful,
oil exports should be averaging at least 2.8 million
bpd after netting out some 500,000 bpd of internal
consumption. Based on an official average export price
of $39.33 per barrel during first quarter 2005, this
means Venezuela's oil export earnings during the first
quarter should have totaled slightly more than $9.9
billion.
However, Energy and Mines Minister Rafael Ramirez,
who also is PDVSA's president, recently said PDVSA
deposited only $6.43 billion at the central bank.
This leaves $2.39 billion in oil export earnings unaccounted
for -- if the government's official production figures
are truthful.
The black hole at PDVSA could be even greater than
Guerra estimates. Domingo Maza Zavala, the central
bank's director, recently said PDVSA deposited only
$4.8 billion at the bank during the first quarter,
not $6.43 billion as claimed by Ramirez. Based on
Guerra's estimates, this means $4.02 billion in foreign
exchange that PDVSA should have earned during the
first quarter is "missing" because it was
not deposited at the bank.
There are several possible explanations for the discrepancy.
The most likely reason is that the Chavez government's
official oil production figures are false. Based on
official production claims, PDVSA should be exporting
2.8 million bpd in crude oil and refined products.
However, Guerra thinks Venezuela is exporting only
about 1.8 million bpd.
Another likely explanation is that many individuals
associated with Chavez and the Bolivarian Revolution
could be stealing. PDVSA has not published audited
financial statements since 2002. Moreover, the National
Assembly's Energy Commission is investigating 228
cases of alleged corruption in PDVSA. A National Assembly
source who works with the commission said May 16 that
there are "hundreds more" corruption accusations
involving PDVSA the commission is not yet investigating.
PDVSA's collapse will not be slowed in the foreseeable
future. The destructive momentum imposed during the
past three years by Chavez cannot be reversed. In
fact, the government's decision to suspend the 32
oilfield operating contracts and demand retroactive
income tax payments totaling perhaps as much as $2
billion from the oil companies likely will make PDVSA's
crisis worse. As demonstrated by the remarks of Petrobras'
chief financial officer that his company will study
conditions in Venezuela before investing there, many
foreign oil companies are becoming increasingly discouraged
about the chances of entering into successful long-term
joint ventures with PDVSA.
Sources with several foreign oil companies in Caracas
said May 16 that the foreign companies are willing
to negotiate changes to their existing commercial
relationships with PDVSA. But as one oil executive
remarked, "No one in PDVSA or the Energy Ministry
seems to have any negotiating capabilities."
This executive said his company has communicated "repeatedly"
to PDVSA and the Chavez government that it wants to
do business in Venezuela. However, he added, "Instead
of talking to us the Chavez government is resorting
to threats and intimidation."
Moreover, Chavez is increasing the pressure against
foreign oil companies. On May 15 he said the companies
involved in the nullified operating contracts will
no longer be granted any dollars to cover their local
costs. Venezuelan tax authorities also are investigating
these companies on charges of tax evasion made by
Chavez, who claims foreign oil companies owe unpaid
taxes, as well as related penalties for evasion and
late payment.
Chavez's escalating attacks against foreign oil companies
contradict his frequent assertions that Venezuela
wants foreign oil companies to invest in Venezuela.
Chavez has also explicitly invited investments from
the national oil companies of Brazil, China and Spain
-- countries he has identified as special strategic
partners of his Bolivarian Revolution. However, Petrobras,
China National Petroleum Corp. and Repsol YPF SA are
among the companies now being investigated for alleged
tax evasion.
PDVSA's collapsing crude oil production will continue
for the foreseeable future. PDVSA is not investing
enough in well maintenance and development of new
production capacity. As a result, PDVSA cannot offset
oil reservoir depletion rates that average between
20 percent and 25 percent annually, depending on the
age of the oil fields. These natural depletion rates
result from the loss of internal reservoir pressure
levels as crude oil is extracted and no efforts are
made to inject natural gas and steam to maintain pressure
levels. As a result, PDVSA is producing fewer barrels
of oil per well.
The Chavez government has an official PDVSA expansion
plan that calls for investing more than $40 billion
in the next five years to raise production capacity
to more than 5 million bpd. But that plan exists only
on paper. Since Chavez became president in early 1999,
PDVSA has announced at least 15 expansion plans, but
none of them have been launched to date.
As PDVSA's production capacity collapses, and the
Chavez government milks the oil industry for every
penny it can get, investment by foreign oil companies
is becoming increasingly critical for Venezuela's
continued viability as a major oil producer and exporter.
However, Chavez's bullyboy tactics against the oil
companies are backfiring, and meanwhile, the oil industry
-- Venezuela's principal economic support -- is slowly
being strangled.
•
Related articles
Gustavo Coronel
» Widespread
corruption and the collapse of PDVSA: The two main
diseases undermining the Chávez revolution,
May 16, 2005
» Open
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and Spanish)
» Chávez:
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» More
on the destruction of Petróleos de Venezuela,
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» The
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» From
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El Nuevo Herald
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de 2005 (in Spanish)
» Desangran
a la petrolera venezolana, 11 de Abril de 2005
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El Universal
» PDVSA
bajo la lupa (in Spanish)
GatoEncerrado.net
» Venezuela
at the Edge of the Abysm, May 15, 2005
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