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Wednesday, 19 June 2013

Socialist explosion

Refinery explosion emblematic of Hugo Chavez curse

Venezuela’s Amuay refinery explosion is emblematic of the Hugo Chavez curse. The blast hobbled PDVSA’s largest oil processor - as well as killing 39 people. The Venezuelan leader’s policy of placing loyalty before commercial prowess may not have caused the accident. But it has warped the nation’s business ethos. The way he has meddled in the state-owned oil company offers an apt example.

A decade ago Chavez purged PDVSA of 19,000 employees he considered enemies and now rewards political allegiance over anything else. Employees must now devote as much time to political proselytizing as they do to pumping and refining oil. Top jobs typically go to true-blue Chavistas.

As a result, PDVSA is no stranger to maintenance issues from wellhead blowups to oil spills and unplanned shutdowns. And now, at some 2.7 million barrels a day, oil output is almost a fifth below the level when he took office in 1999.

Recent moves make matters worse. Last week Chavez vowed to strip PDVSA of a seventh of its 70 percent stake in a key oil venture to hand it to another government-controlled enterprise -mining operation CVG. It’s a great deal for the latter. CVG companies consistently lose money, so getting a 10 percent share in 150,000-barrel-a-day Petropiar oil venture will bolster its finances. And it may also help win over CVG’s 9,940 steel workers ahead of the presidential election in October.

But it does nothing for PDVSA aside from saddle it with a weak partner. Perhaps Chavez hopes the deal might prompt the oil company to use CVG to supply it with the steel pipes it needs. But CVG lacks the operational capacity to do so.

It’s not the only recent example of mind-bending politicking, either. On August 22 Chavez approved a plan to finance unpaid benefits for government workers with petroleum-backed bonds. Workers cannot cash them in for a year, however, and the 18 percent coupon they pay is less than the 19.4 percent inflation rate. But after years of waiting, this transparent play for votes must seem better than nothing to thousands of active and retired public servants.

It’s all more evidence of the dangers of the president’s easy-money mentality. It might only take days to get Amuay running again. But fixing the nation’s economy will take far longer.

Context News

On Aug. 25 a gas leak at Venezuela’s 640,000-barrel-a-day Amuay refinery sparked an explosion that led the government to halt operations while they attempt to put out a raging fire. At least 39 people were killed, mostly soldiers guarding the refinery. The incident has been recorded as the worst accident to the OPEC nation’s oil industry.

On Aug. 20 Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez ordered state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela to surrender a 10 percent stake in the Petropiar heavy oil upgrader to state miner CVG, to help buck up the mining concern’s money-losing operations. The decision also includes a deal to turn CVG-owned Sidor, the country’s largest steelmaker, into the main steel pipe supplier to PDVSA.

Petropiar is one of four heavy oil upgrading ventures located along the Orinoco river belt. PDVSA owns 70 percent and Chevron the rest. As planned, CVG would get its 10 percent participation in the venture from PDVSA’s share.

On Aug. 22, Chavez signed off on a plan to issue the “Petrorinoco bond,” a fixed-income instrument the government is handing to public-sector workers to pay for long-delayed employment benefits. Workers must hold on to the instruments for a year before they can sell them on the local bourse.

The new bonds will be fully backed by the Venezuelan government and will be issued by a newly created National Workers Savings Fund. The fund will receive and manage the proceeds of a 2.22 percent royalty rate currently paid by public-private oil joint ventures known as mixed companies as well as by proceeds from a 3.33 percent oil extraction tax these companies pay for operating in Venezuela.

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