[AGL] Satan has seized South America

Wayne Johnson cadaobh at shentel.net
Tue May 2 07:28:28 EDT 2006


Quick.  Send in the Marines!  Nuke Caracas or somebody!  The sky is falling!

Oh.  Wait.  Most of our Marines are trying to make Iraq safe for 
Halliburton.

Darn.
--------------------------------------

Bolivian President Seizes Gas Industry
Troops Deployed In Move to Block Foreign Influence

By Monte Reel and Steven Mufson
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, May 2, 2006; A01



CARACAS, Venezuela, May 1 -- Bolivian President Evo Morales seized control 
of the country's natural gas industry Monday, sending soldiers to occupy 
fields that he contends private companies have plundered for years.

Morales said that unless foreign energy firms agreed to give Bolivia's state 
oil company oversight of production and a majority of their revenue 
generated in Bolivia, the government would evict them from the fields.

"The time has come, the awaited day, a historic day in which Bolivia retakes 
absolute control of our natural resources," Morales said during a televised 
speech from a gas field near the country's southern border. "The looting by 
foreign companies has ended."

Morales's announcement was expected, but his deployment of troops to gas 
fields was a strong statement in a region where governments are moving to 
block outside influence, particularly from the United States, and exert more 
control over the energy industry. Venezuela recently voided drilling 
contracts with private companies at 32 oil fields, demanding new contracts 
that give the state oil company a 60 percent stake. Ecuador is finalizing a 
law that could limit excessive profits by foreign crude producers.

The developments in Bolivia were not expected to affect the U.S. energy 
market. Even in Bolivia, analysts played down the importance of the troop 
deployment, but they acknowledged the message Morales was trying to send.

"I think it was a symbolic move to send the military to the oil fields to 
show that Bolivians are now in charge of taking care of their own property," 
said Gonzalo Chavez, a political analyst with the Catholic University in La 
Paz, the Bolivian capital. "It's an extremely popular move. There's a lot of 
nationalism in the country right now, and this is something that a lot of 
people are going to like."

During his victorious electoral campaign last year, Morales promised that he 
would force energy companies to give at least 50 percent of their revenue to 
the government's state energy company. The plan announced Monday called for 
a substantially higher percentage -- 82 percent -- to be surrendered by any 
company producing more than 100 million cubic feet of natural gas daily. He 
said that all companies have six months to agree to the terms or be kicked 
out of the country.

Bolivia boasts South America's second-largest reserves of natural gas, 
behind Venezuela. The country does not play a major role in international 
energy markets, but its natural gas exports are important to some of its 
neighbors.

About 25 international energy firms operate in Bolivia. Brazil's Petrobras 
and Spain's Repsol YPF have the largest operations in the country, and Exxon 
Mobil Corp. of the United States maintains a smaller presence.

Morales has conceded that Bolivia needs the help of those foreign companies 
to get reserves out of the ground, and he has said his nationalization plan 
is not designed to cut those companies completely out of the sector.

Bob Davis, an Exxon spokesman, said Monday that the company was "monitoring 
the situation" in Bolivia. He said that earlier concerns prompted Exxon to 
submit a letter to an international arbitration board saying that the 
company was contemplating a request for arbitration.

Oil industry officials have been increasingly concerned about the investment 
climate in Bolivia. According to news reports, Bolivia's attorney general, 
Pedro Gareca, opened criminal cases in mid-March against three former 
Bolivian presidents and eight former energy ministers for alleged wrongdoing 
in drawing up and signing contracts with foreign oil companies.

Morales's government has held bilateral talks with energy firms in recent 
weeks, but negotiations sputtered. Petrobras, after announcing additional 
investments of $5 billion shortly after Morales's inauguration in January, 
rescinded the plan in March because of uncertainty over the government's 
policies. Tensions also flared with Repsol YPF after the government accused 
its executives of smuggling oil out of the country.

Monday's announcement coincided with May Day workers' celebrations 
throughout the country. Morales had been under political pressure to 
announce the plan, which his backers consider a key to the success of his 
administration. He has said he plans to use increased state revenue from the 
takeover to fund social programs in South America's poorest country.

A longtime leader of Bolivia's coca growers union, Morales was elected in 
December after leading protests railing against foreign corporations and the 
management of the country's gas resources, which are mostly located in the 
Santa Cruz province in the southeastern corner of Bolivia. He spent the 
weekend in Cuba with ideological ally Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan leader who 
has helped lead a regional shift away from the privatization of South 
American industries and toward more state control.

Even though it recently reached oil independence, Brazil is the country that 
leans most heavily on Bolivia for natural gas. In the 1990s, the Brazilian 
government reinforced the country's hydroelectric power grid with plants 
fueled by natural gas, and many of Brazil's automobiles run on natural gas. 
About half of Brazil's natural gas needs -- 520 million cubic feet daily --  
are supplied by Bolivia via a 2,000-mile pipeline financed mostly by 
Petrobras. In 2003, Petrobras discovered gas deposits within Brazil that 
some experts say could significantly ease demand, but tapping that gas could 
prove costly and difficult.




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