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Chavez's Not-So-Radical Oil Move (Time Magazine)

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-02-07 12:36 PM
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Chavez's Not-So-Radical Oil Move (Time Magazine)
Edited on Wed May-02-07 12:43 PM by Judi Lynn
Chavez's Not-So-Radical Oil Move
Tuesday, May. 01, 2007 By TIM PADGETT/MIAMI



Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez (center) operates
an oil rig, near Independencia, Venezuela.
Miraflores / EPA

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has a garish knack for making the world think he's the most radical of radicals. So when the left-wing, anti-U.S. leader ascended a raucous stage in front of a petrochemical plant in eastern Venezuela today — May Day, the leftiest day of the year — and announced his government's takeover of the nation's lucrative heavy oil industry, it sent the usual panic through Washington and the international media. "It's national power!" shouted Chavez, who controls the hemisphere's largest crude reserves. "We can't have socialism if the state doesn't have control over its resources!"

But the truth — one that both Chavez and his archfoe, the Bush Administration, would prefer you not know — is that when it comes to oil nationalization, Hugo is hardly the most radical of his global peers. In fact, even after today's petro-theatrics, Chavez is just catching up with the rest of the pack.

From Mexico to China, more than 75% of the world's oil reserves are controlled by national oil companies today. Of the world's top 20 oil-producing firms, 14 are state-run. And even though Chavez has now stripped foreign oil companies like Exxon Mobil of any majority stakes they had in Venezuelan oil production projects — mandating that his state-run company, Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), have at least 60% ownership from here on out — he's at least allowing those private multinationals to continue taking part in the drilling. Not so, for example, in Mexico or the world's largest oil producer, Saudi Arabia. Washington touts those two countries as model energy allies, despite the fact that for more than half a century their national oil companies have barred U.S. and other foreign oil businesses from production ventures.

Apart from his fiery rhetoric, what makes Chavez's move seem more jarring is the fact that, until he came to power in 1999, Venezuela had been a trend-bucking oasis for Big Oil. Venezuela did nationalize its oil industry in 1976, but in the 1990s it had steadily re-opened its fields to foreign investment — in some cases handing the multinationals deals that even conservative Venezuelans considered too sweet. Chavez has just as steadily, and stridently, reversed that policy, paring down the multinationals' ownership while ratcheting up their taxes and royalties. And because Venezuela is America's fourth-largest foreign crude supplier — providing the U.S. with almost 15% of its oil imports — each turn of his nationalization screw tends to provoke outsized alarm.
(snip/...)

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1616644,00.html
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On the Road Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-02-07 12:50 PM
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1. God, It's Good to Get Some Perspective
Surprise it's from Time.
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endarkenment Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-02-07 01:34 PM
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2. How can this be?
We've been assured here that nationalization is one step from stalinization and that it will be the wreck of Venezuela's oil industry.

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