Adamant: Hardest metal
Friday, March 21, 2003

Venezuelan crisis could threaten role as stable wartime oil supplier to U.S.

newstribune.com Thursday, March 20, 2003

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -- Venezuela insists it will be a reliable wartime supplier of oil to the United States despite sometimes testy relations and a slow recovery from a two-month oil industry strike.

"We are and will continue to be the most secure supplier of oil to the United States," Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel said this week.

His pledge came despite Washington's recent criticism of President Hugo Chavez for arresting strike leaders and obstructing efforts to hold early elections. Chavez told Washington to keep out of Venezuelan affairs.

Others question how soon Chavez's government can stabilize exports after firing nearly half of the state-owned oil monopoly's 40,000 people.

Some customers complain they've had trouble contracting tanker shipments with new personnel. The government isn't releasing export figures. Pre-strike exports averaged 2.5 million barrels a day -- including 1.5 million barrels a day to the United States.

"For the first time in our history, shipping crude to the United States in time of war isn't guaranteed because of Venezuela's internal crisis," said Alberto Quiros Corradi, a former president of Shell de Venezuela.

U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham has said it could take at least two months before Venezuelan exports stabilize. While its crude quality is lower than many Middle Eastern grades, Venezuela can ship quickly to the United States compared to 40-day tanker shipments from the Middle East.

Market analysts disagree whether war in Iraq will increase or depress prices, disrupt Middle East production or affect low U.S. inventories. Venezuela traditionally has banked on price rises to boost its oil-dependent economy.

Venezuela's opposition, including nearly all oil workers, went on strike Dec. 4 to protest Chavez's handling of the economy and alleged rights abuses and to demand early elections.

Chavez, a former army officer who led a failed coup bid in 1992, was elected president in 1998 and re-elected in 2000 to a six-year term.

The strike failed. Chavez's government claims it has already surpassed its OPEC production quota of 2.8 million barrels a day and can push it to 4 million barrels by April if a protracted war increases prices.

Fired oil executives say production is closer to 2.4 million barrels. Some analysts, meanwhile, said at an OPEC meeting last week they doubted Venezuela's production had recovered so quickly after a low of 150,000 barrels during the strike.

Roger Diwan, managing director of markets at Washington-based PFC Energy, estimates Venezuela is exporting 1.8 million barrels a day and producing 2.4 million barrels a day.

"They've done a good job. They've surprised a lot of people," Diwan said Wednesday. "I never thought they would get up to this level."

Venezuela's ties with Washington have centered on oil since 1914, when the first rig tapped what proved to be the largest reserves outside the Middle East.

Developed in large part with American capital, the oil industry met U.S. needs in both World Wars, the 1973 Arab oil embargo and the 1991 Persian Gulf War. It sided with U.S. interests despite being a founding member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and nationalizing the oil industry in 1976.

Chavez, for his part, has been uncharacteristically quiet about the Iraqi crisis. He has concentrated on consolidating control after the nationwide strike, which cost Venezuela at least $6 billion.

Oil is key to Chavez's presidency, generating 80 percent of Venezuela's export earnings and a third of its $100 billion gross domestic product. Venezuela's economy is seen contracting by at least 15 percent in 2003, and a wartime spike in oil prices could provide relief.

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