Venezuela's government claimed in the past they had nationalized the oil industry. Yet last month the oil minister and PDVSA president Rafael Ramirez issued a request from foreign oil companies which frankly leave this writer wondering if Mr Ramirez knows who is in charge of Venezuela's oil.
"The Ministry of Energy asked foreign oil companies to increase output
Venezuela would review the rights granted to foreign oil firms to operate in the South American country in joint ventures with state-run oil company Petróleos de Venezuela (Pdvsa) if they fail to increase output, warned Venezuela's Minister of Energy and Petroleum Rafael Ramírez. In December, amid a decline in oil production in Venezuela -where more than 90 percent of revenues come from oil exports- the Ministry of Energy and Petroleum asked oil joint ventures to increase oil output, Reuters reported. In December, Venezuela requested oil firms to present a schedule to raise output within a period of 30 working days."
http://english.eluniversal.com/2011/01/28/en_eco_esp_venezuela-may-review_28A5061653.shtmlThe truth is a little more complicated than meets the eye. What Venezuela did when it claimed it had nationalized the foreign oil companies was to morph the entities operating the fields into joint ventures, in which PDVSA owns 60 % of the stock, and the foreign multinational owns 40 % of the stock.
Because PDVSA owns the majority of the shares, they get to name the senior management, and of course they get to carry the votes when the stockholders meet - because they own s majority of the shares. Therefore this request by Ramirez is very interesting --- he is behaving as if the foreign multinationals, which they made so much noise about kicking out --- are still in control.
I don't have the full set of information about what's going on, and I do know a bit more than I'm letting you know here in DU, but let's just say:
1. The nationalization wasn't really what they touted, they let multinationals stay, and they do own shares in these corporations or joint ventures.
2. PDVSA seems to be so broke it's relinquishing its rights to manage the corporations (which it has as majority stockholder) as long as the multinational oil companies come rescue them with a financing package for the JV's, which has been squeezed to death and mismanaged by PDVSA until now.
Foreign oil multinationals, being what they are, will probably extract a pound of flesh out of PDVSA to go along - meaning there will be secret protocols and agreement which will tie the oil to be produced, so that it can be exported by the foreigners to repay the debt (this is what the Chinese are doing). Or they will walk. In which case PDVSA is about to see its production crash even more. And which means Mr Chavez' cash, which he needs to give to his clients and the corrupt crooks who surround him, will not be there.
This is going to be getting curiouser and curioser. If I were an educated Venezuelan professional, I would be getting out, the country is already a basket case, with high inflation, high crime, lots of corruption, lawlessness, a government which doesn't respect property rights, and is led by a maniac. Time to hit the road and become refugees, my friends.