Venezuela Seizes Oil Installation From U.S.-Based Company

May 8th, 2009 (13) Posted By Erik Wong.

obama_chavez

Venezuela has seized a major oil installation from the U.S.-based Williams companies, Reuters quoted a company source.

Venezuela has seized a major oil installation from the U.S.-based Williams companies, Reuters quoted a company source.

Venezuela has seized a major oil installation from the U.S.-based Williams companies, Reuters quoted a company source.

President Hugo Chavez said his government would begin seizing control of some oil contractors on Friday following the National Assembly’s approval of a law that paved the way for the takeovers.

The law approved by the largely pro-Chavez assembly on Thursday enables state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela SA, or PDVSA, to take over contractors without following the usual procedures to expropriate business.

“Tomorrow we’ll start recovering the goods and assets that will now belong to the state,” Chavez said in a televised speech late Thursday after the legislative vote.

He said PDVSA would seize 300 boats as well as dozens of docks and other transportation installations in western Lake Maracaibo on Friday, and absorb the 8,000 workers affected.

Venezuela’s state oil company has recently clashed with domestic and foreign service providers that help extract the OPEC nation’s heavy crude, accumulating billions of dollars in debts as it aims to renegotiate contracts to reduce costs by 40 percent.

PDVSA says some of those contracts are now overvalued due to falling crude prices that have shrunk government revenue. Venezuela relies on oil for 93 percent of its export income, but has seen world oil prices slide 61 percent since their July peak — to settle at $56.71 on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Thursday.

The companies covered by the legislation provide such services as natural gas processing, the injection of natural gas or water into oil fields to improve recovery, and management of docks and boats on Lake Maracaibo.

The law was approved by 153 lawmakers from Chavez’s ruling party, while eight lawmakers voted against the measure and three abstained.

Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez said the law could affect foreign companies such as U.S. natural gas processor and distributor Williams Cos. Inc., based in Tulsa, Oklahoma — which said in April that it plans to write off $241 million related to unpaid fees from PDVSA.

“It’s fundamental that we control of all of this to guarantee the development of primary activities,” Ramirez said in comments published by Venezuela’s state-run Bolivarian News Agency.

PDVSA has already taken over the operations of some companies that have claimed a default, including the SIMCO consortium, which has worked injecting water into oil fields in Lake Maracaibo for the past 10 years.

Houston-based Wood Group, which is a 49.5 percent partner in the consortium, said in a statement Thursday that PDVSA took over its operations earlier this year “following the consortium submitting a notice of default due to nonpayment and other contractual disputes.” A spokeswoman for the company declined to comment on the new law.

While Ramirez denied that oil drillers will fall under the law, Patrick Esteruelas, an analyst with the Eurasia Group in New York, said the law’s vague wording means these and other service companies could also be affected.

At least two U.S. oil drillers have halted operations in Venezuela over delayed payments, including Helmerich & Payne, based in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The company has halted seven of its 11 oil rigs in Venezuela this year, saying PDVSA owes it $116 million.

Venezuelan oil service companies are also “very afraid,” said Nestor Borjas, who heads the business chamber Fedecamaras in western Zulia state. PDVSA is behind an average eight months on payments to 220 companies in oil-rich Zulia responsible for everything from oil well maintenance to providing transport, he said.

Under Chavez, Venezuela has already nationalized foreign-owned steel and cement companies, as well as four major oil projects.

But Esteruelas said PDVSA seems to be aiming more to pressure companies into accepting its terms rather than planning for widespread nationalizations.

“I don’t think that PDVSA wants to immediately take over the entire service sector,” he said. “That would be a logistical nightmare.”

He and other analysts warn the law could discourage foreign investors, including some of the very companies PDVSA is trying to attract to bid on exploration areas in the eastern Orinoco River basin.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • BT

    BHO has a great role model.

  • Hawkerdriver(Pisson the Koran)

    And still the dumbasses line up to buy gas at Citgo..

  • Bob

    Is Chairman Obama pointing his finger at the book?

    • windigo

      Same thing I noticed…that is clear…he’s pointing right at the book…unbelievable!

    • http://patdollard.com Pat Dollard

      I think he’s saying “Get Some”… :mrgreen:

  • Sully

    Minor changes and it reads like a Barry vs U.S. banks or GM story.

    • JCD

      Theft is what it is. Pure and simple.

    • Mike Mose

      Credit cards and oil companies are next. You will not be able to buy anything Obama doesn’t approve of first.

      Oklahoma and Texas starting to look like the America we used to know.

  • http://earthlink nomee1

    we are kinda busy now, but we will get to the takeover

  • Mike Mose

    He wants world wide Communism, the same as liar Pelosi and traitor Reid.

  • billy_bonney

    This is an act of war,international robbery that should be taken before the world court Chavez knows he can get away with it coz America is now under the ‘leadership’ of a pussy and student of his own evil communist ideology.

    Billy

  • TechnicalDeath

    And this little piggy went to the market.

  • http://www.dirtydozensbunker.com Sanders

    I wonder if that’s why the price of gasoline jumped 20-40 cents overnight?