History of the Venezuelan oil industry

Venezuela's historic inflation rate beside annual oil revenues.
Sources: EIA 1, EIA 2, International Monetary Fund: Data & Statistics (1980-2008, 2015), CIA: The World Factbook (2009–2014), Business Insider (2014, 2015)
The Real and Nominal price of oil from 1861 to 2015.

Venezuela is one of the world's largest exporters of oil and has the world's largest proven oil reserves at an estimated 296.5 billion barrels (20% of global reserves) as of 2012.

In 2008, crude oil production in Venezuela was the tenth-highest in the world at 2,394,020 barrels per day (380,619 m3/d) and the country was also the eighth-largest net oil exporter in the world. Venezuela is a founder member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).[1]

Pre-discovery

Indigenous usage

The Indigenous peoples in Venezuela, like many ancient societies already utilized crude oils and asphalts from petroleum seeps, which ooze through the ground to the surface, in the years before the Spanish conquistadors. The thick black liquid, known to the locals as mene, was primarily used for medical purposes, as an illumination source, and for the caulking of canoes.[2]

Spanish acquisition

Upon arrival in the early 16th century, the Spanish conquerors learned from the indigenous people to use the naturally occurring bitumen for caulking their ships as well, and for treating their weapons. The first documented shipment of petroleum from Venezuela was in 1539 when a single barrel of oil was sent to Spain to alleviate the gout of Emperor Charles V.[2]

1908–1940

Juan Vicente Gómez
Ancient office of Mene Grande Oil Company

Despite the knowledge of the existence of oil reserves in Venezuela for centuries, the first oil wells of significance were not drilled until the early 1910s. In 1908, Juan Vicente Gómez replaced his ailing predecessor, Cipriano Castro, as the president of Venezuela. Over the next few years, Gómez granted several concessions to explore, produce, and refine oil. Most of these oil concessions were granted to his closest friends, and they in turn passed them on to foreign oil companies that could actually develop them.[3] One such concession was granted to Rafael Max Valladares who hired Caribbean Petroleum (later acquired by Royal Dutch Shell) to carry out his oil exploration project. On 15 April 1914, upon the completion of the Zumaque-I (now called MG-I) oil well, the first Venezuelan oilfield of importance, Mene Grande, was discovered by Caribbean Petroleum in the Maracaibo Basin.[2] This major discovery encouraged a massive wave of foreign oil companies to "invade" Venezuela in an attempt to get a piece of the action.

From 1914 to 1917, several more oil fields were discovered across the country include the emblematic Bolivar Coastal Field; however World War I slowed significant development of the industry. Due to the difficulty in purchasing and transporting the necessary tools and machinery, some oil companies were forced to forego drilling until after the war. By the end of 1917, the first refining operations began at the San Lorenzo refinery to process the Mene Grande field production, and the first significant exports of Venezuelan oil by Caribbean Petroleum left from the San Lorenzo terminal. By the end of 1918, petroleum appeared for the first time on the Venezuelan export statistics at 21,194 metric tons.[2]

It was the blowout of the Barroso No. 2 well in Cabimas in 1922[4] that marked the beginning of Venezuela's modern history as a major producer. This discovery captured the attention of the nation and the world. Soon dozens of foreign companies acquired vast tracts of territory in the hope of striking it rich, and by 1928 Venezuela became the world's leading oil exporter.[5] Oil ended Venezuela's relative anonymity in the eyes of world powers, making it a linchpin of an ever-expanding international oil industry and a new consideration in global policymaking.[5] Venezuela's oil production became a major factor in policy making in Washington before the Second World War.[5]

Cabimas still plays an important role in production from the nation's largest oil fields, which are located around and beneath Lake Maracaibo. Other fields are increasing in importance, mainly in eastern Venezuela.[6] About twenty years after the installation of the first oil drill, Venezuela had become the largest oil exporter in the world and, after the United States, the second largest oil producer. Exports of oil boomed from 1.9% to 91.2% between 1920 and 1935.[7] By the end of the 1930s, Venezuela had become the third-leading oil producer in the world, behind the United States and the Soviet Union, as well as the leading exporter.[8]

First Dutch Disease

By 1929, the dramatic development of the Venezuela oil industry had begun to dominate all other economic sectors in the country, however, agricultural production began to decrease dramatically.[9][10] This sudden increase of attention to oil and neglect of the agrarian sector caused the Venezuelan economy to suffer from a phenomenon known as the Dutch Disease. This "disease" occurs when a commodity brings a substantial increase of income in one sector of the economy, causing a strengthening of currency which in turn harms exports of manufacturing and other sectors.[9]

Agriculture accounted for about one-third of economic production in the 1920s, but by the 1950s this fraction dramatically reduced to one-tenth. This sudden increase of oil production restricted Venezuela's overall ability to create and maintain other industries. The government had ignored serious social problems, including education, health, infrastructure, agriculture, and domestic industries, causing Venezuela to fall well behind other industrialized countries.

Xenophobia

With a large influx of foreign "invaders", the effects of a xenophobia that had not been seen before became apparent. Novelist Jose Rafael Pocaterra described the oilmen as "the new Spaniards". He wrote in 1918:

One day some Spaniards mounted a dark apparatus on three legs, a grotesque stork with crystal eyes. They drew something (on a piece of paper) and opened their way through the forest. Other new Spaniards would open roads…would drill the earth from the top of fantastic towers, producing the fetid fluid…the liquid gold converted into petroleum.

Popular resentment of the foreign oil companies was also evident and expressed in several ways. Rufino Blanco Fombona, a Venezuelan writer and politician, accounts for the conflict between Venezuelan workers and their foreign bosses in his 1927 novel, La Bella y la Fiera:

The workers asked for a miserable salary increase and those blond, blue-eyed men who own millions of dollars, pounds and gulden in European and U.S. banks, refused.

1940–1976

Venezuela production of crude oil, 1950-2012

In 1941, Isaías Medina Angarita, a former army general from the Venezuelan Andes, was indirectly elected president. One of his most important reforms during his tenure was the enactment of the new Hydrocarbons Law of 1943. This new law was the first major political step taken toward gaining more government control over its oil industry. Under the new law, the government took 50% of profits.[3][11] Once passed, this piece of legislation basically remained unchanged until 1976, the year of nationalization, with only two partial revisions being made in 1955 and 1967.

In 1944, the Venezuelan government granted several new concessions encouraging the discovery of even more oil fields. This was mostly attributed to an increase in oil demand caused by an ongoing World War II, and by 1945, Venezuela was producing close to 1 million barrels per day (160,000 m3/d).

Being an avid supplier of petroleum to the Allies of World War II, Venezuela had increased its production by 42 percent from 1943-44 alone.[12] Even after the war, oil demand continued to rise due to the fact that there was an increase from twenty-six million to forty million cars in service in the United States from 1945 to 1950.[13]

By the mid-1950s, however, Middle Eastern countries had started contributing significant amounts of oil to the international petroleum market, and the United States had implemented oil import quotas. The world experienced an over-supply of oil, and prices plummeted.

Creation of OPEC

Main article: OPEC
OPEC countries

In response to the chronically low oil prices of the mid and late 1950s, oil producing countries Venezuela, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Kuwait met in Baghdad in September 1960 to form the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). The main goal of the OPEC member countries was to work together in order to secure and stabilize international oil prices to ensure their interests as oil producing nations. This was managed largely via maintaining export quotas that helped prevent the overproduction of oil on an international scale.

Oil embargo of 1973

Main article: 1973 oil crisis

In the early 1970s, oil producing countries of the Persian Gulf began negotiations with oil companies in attempt to increase their ownership participation. In 1972 they rapidly obtained a 25 percent participation, and less than a year later they revised those agreements to obtain up to 60 percent participation in the ownership of the companies.[3] By 1973, OPEC Persian Gulf states members decided to raise their prices by 70 percent and to place an embargo on countries friendly to Israel (the United States and the Netherlands). This event became known as the 1973 oil crisis. Following a culmination of conflicts in the Middle East and the oil producing countries of the Persian Gulf no longer exporting to the United States and oil prices rising steeply, Venezuela experienced a significant increase in oil production profits. Between 1972 and 1974, the Venezuelan government revenues had quadrupled.[9] With a new sense of confidence, Venezuelan president Carlos Andrés Pérez pledged that Venezuela would develop significantly within a few years.[9] By substituting imports, subsidies, and protective tariffs, he planned to use oil profits to increase employment, fight poverty, increase income, and diversify the economy. However, OPEC members had been violating production quotas, and oil prices fell drastically again in the 1980s, pushing Venezuela deeper into debt.

Nationalization

Petroleum map of Venezuela, 1972

Well before 1976, Venezuela had taken several steps in the direction of nationalization of its oil industry. In August 1971, under the presidency of Rafael Caldera, a law was passed that nationalized the country's natural gas industry. Also in 1971 the law of reversion was passed which stated that all the assets, plant, and equipment belonging to concessionaires within or outside the concession areas would revert to the nation without compensation upon the expiration of the concession.[3] The movement towards nationalism was experienced once again under decree 832. Decree 832 stipulated that all exploration, production, refining, and sales programs of the oil companies had to be approved in advance by the Ministry of Mines and Hydrocarbons.[3]

Nationalization become official when the presidency of Carlos Andrés Pérez, whose economic plan, "La Gran Venezuela", called for the nationalization of the oil industry and diversification of the economy via import substitution. The country officially nationalized its oil industry on 1 January 1976 at the site of Zumaque oilwell 1 (Mene Grande), and along with it came the birth of Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) which is the Venezuelan state-owned petroleum company. All foreign oil companies that once did business in Venezuela were replaced by Venezuelan companies. Each of the former concessionaires was simply substituted by a new 'national' oil company, which maintained the structures and functions of its MNC-predecessor.[14]

All the new companies are owned by a holding company-Peteroven or PDV- and in its turned owned by the State.[15] Ultimately not much had changed in this regard, as all Venezuelans with leading positions in the MNCs took over the leading positions of the respective new companies,[15] and therefore still securing their interests in Venezuela's oil. PDVSA controls activity involving oil and natural gas in Venezuela. In 1980, in an aggressive internationalization plan, PDVSA bought refineries in USA and Europe as the American Citgo that catapultated it to the third-largest oil company in the world.[9]

1977–1998

After the 1973 oil crisis, the brief period of economic prosperity for Venezuela was relatively short lived. As Venezuelan oil minister and OPEC co-founder Juan Pablo Pérez Alfonzo had presciently warned in 1976: "Ten years from now, twenty years from now, you will see, oil will bring us ruin... It is the devil's excrement."[16] This was the case during the "1980s oil glut". OPEC member countries were not adhering strictly to their assigned quotas, and once again oil prices plummeted.

Second Dutch Disease

During the mid-1980s, Venezuela's oil production steadily began to rise.[17] By the 1990s, symptoms of the Dutch Disease were once again becoming apparent. Between 1990-99, Venezuela's industrial production declined from 50 percent to 24 percent of the country's gross domestic product compared to a decrease of 36 percent to 29 percent for the rest of Latin America,[18] but production levels continued to rise until 1998.[17]

However, the efficiency of PDVSA was brought into question over these years. During 1976–1992, the amount of PDVSA’s income that went towards the company's costs was on average 29 percent leaving a remainder of 71 percent for the government. From 1993 to 2000, however, that distribution almost completely reversed, to where 64 percent of PDVSA's income were kept by PDVSA, leaving a remainder of only 36 percent for the government.[19]

1999–present

Former Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez.

"There is no question that Venezuela under Chávez came to experience one of the worst cases of Dutch Disease in the world."

Foreign Policy[20]

After Hugo Chávez officially took office in February 1999, several policy changes involving the country's oil industry were made to explicitly tie it to the state under his Bolivarian Revolution. Since then, PDVSA has not demonstrated any capability to bring new oil fields onstream since nationalizing heavy oil projects in the Orinoco Petroleum Belt formerly operated by international oil companies ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, Chevron and Total. Chávez’s policies damaged Venezuela's oil industry due to lack of investment, corruption and cash shortages.[21][22]

The Chávez government used PDVSA resources to fund social programmes, treating it like a "piggybank",[23] and PDVSA staff were required to support Chávez. His social policies resulted in overspending[20][24][25] that caused shortages in Venezuela and allowed the inflation rate to grow to one of the highest rates in the world.[26][27][28]

According to Corrales and Penfold, "Chávez was not the first president in Venezuelan history to be mesmerized by the promise of oil, but he was the one who allowed the sector to decline the most", with most statistics showing deterioration of the industry since the beginning of his presidency.[29]

Chávez's successor, Nicolás Maduro, continued much of the policies created by Chávez, with Venezuela further deteriorating as a result of continuing such policies.[20][24][25][30]

Reinforcement of OPEC

At the time of Chávez's election, OPEC had lost much of its influence compared to when it was first created. A combination of OPEC members, including Venezuela, regularly ignoring quotas and non-OPEC countries such as Mexico and Russia beginning to expand on their own petroleum industries resulted in record low oil prices to which hurt the Venezuelan economy. One of Chávez's main goals as president was to combat this problem by re-strengthening OPEC and getting countries to once again abide by their quotas. Chávez personally visited many of the leaders of oil producing nations around the world, and in 2000, he hosted the first summit of the heads-of-state of OPEC in 25 years (the second ever).[9] Goals of this meeting, held in Caracas, included recuperating the credibility of Venezuela in OPEC, defending oil prices, consolidating relations between Venezuela and the Arab/Islamic world, and to strengthen OPEC in general.

The meeting could be considered a success given the record high oil prices of the following years, but much of that is also a consequence of the 11 September 2001 attacks against the United States, the Iraq War, and the significant increase in demand for oil from developing economies like China and India, which helped prompt a surge in oil prices to levels far higher than those targeted by OPEC during the preceding period. In addition to these events, the December 2002 oil strike in Venezuela, which resulted in a loss of almost 3mmbpd of crude oil production, brought a sharp increase in world prices of crude.[31]

Enabling act laws and controversy

Bolivarian propaganda supporting Chávez on the PDVSA Towers in Maracaibo.

In 2000, the pro-Chávez National Assembly granted Chávez the ability to rule by decree due to the poor economic conditions.[32] On 13 November 2001 while ruling by decree, Chávez enacted the new Hydrocarbons Law, which came into effect in January 2002.[32] The laws "marked a turning point in public sentiment toward the president" with both chavistas and anti-chavistas outraged at the changes.[33] For the opposition to Chávez, such dramatic changes to the government proved to them that Chávez was a "dictator-in-training".[32]

Chávez began setting goals of reinstating quotas, such as ten percent of PDVSA’s annual investment budget was to be spent on social programs.[34] He also changed tax policies and the oil revenue collection process.[9] Chavez initiated many of these major changes to exert more control over PDVSA and efficiently deal with the problems he and his supporters had over PDVSA’s small revenue contributions to the government. By 2002, warnings grew of the Chávez overspending on social programs in order to maintain populist support.[35]

In December 2002, PDVSA officially went on strike creating a near-complete halt on oil production in Venezuela. The aim of the Venezuelan general strike of 2002-2003 was to pressure Chávez into resigning and calling early elections. The strike lasted approximately two months, and the government ended up firing 19,000 PDVSA employees and replacing them with workers loyal to the Chávez government.[36] By January 2002, protests involving hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans opposing Chávez became common in Venezuela.[32] In April 2002, mass demonstrations occurred in Caracas and Chávez was temporarily overthrown by the military during the 2002 Venezuelan coup d'état attempt.

A few months after the failure of the coup and the return of Chavez, a combination of labor unions and business groups called for an "indefinite national strike" which, in many places, turned out to be a forced "bosses lock out" where the employees were prevented from working. When the strike ended, substantial macroeconomic damage had been done with unemployment up by 5 percent. This increase brought the country to a national unemployment peak of over 20 percent in March 2003.[37]

Following the strikes, Chávez referred to regaining control of the industry as "re-nationalization". He aimed at improving the efficiency of PDVSA in the context of distributing a greater amount of its revenues to his government and also by certain changes in taxation. Certain tax reforms had already been implemented earlier in Chávez's first term.[9] By 2006, the government had a 40 percent share, which was announced to be increased by 20 percent.

International deals

In 2005, PDVSA opened its first office in China, and announced plans to nearly triple its fleet of oil tankers in that region. Chávez had long stated that he would like to sell more Venezuelan oil to China so his country can become more independent of the United States. The United States currently accounts for 65 percent of Venezuela's exports.[38]

In 2007, Chávez struck a deal with Brazilian oil company Petrobras to build an oil refinery in northeastern Brazil where crude oil will be sent from both Brazil and Argentina. A similar deal was struck with Ecuador where Venezuela agreed to refine 100,000 barrels (16,000 m3) of crude oil from Ecuador at discount prices. Cuba agreed to let thousands of Venezuelans be received for medical treatment and health programs, and in turn, Venezuela agreed to sell several thousands of barrels to Cuba at a 40% discount under Petrocaribe program.

Third Dutch Disease

Shortages leave shelves empty in this Venezuelan store.

The Chávez administration used high oil prices in the 2000s on his populist policies and to gain support from voters.[20][35] The social works initiated by Chávez's government relied on oil products, the keystone of the Venezuelan economy, with Chávez's administration suffering from Dutch disease as a result.[20][39]

According to Cannon, the state income from oil revenue grew "from 51% of total income in 2000 to 56% 2006";[40] oil exports increased "from 77% in 1997 [...] to 89% in 2006";[40] and his administration's dependence on petroleum sales was "one of the chief problems facing the Chávez government".[40] By 2008, exports of everything but oil "collapsed"[20] and in 2012, the World Bank explained that Venezuela's economy is "extremely vulnerable" to changes in oil prices since in 2012 "96% of the country's exports and nearly half of its fiscal revenue" relied on oil production.[41]

Economists say that the Venezuelan government's overspending on social programs and strict business policies contributed to imbalances in the country's economy, contributing to rising inflation, poverty, low healthcare spending and shortages in Venezuela going into the final years of his presidency.[20][24][25][30][35][42]

According to analysts, the economic woes Venezuela suffered under President Nicolás Maduro would have still occurred with or without Chávez.[43]

See also

Notes

  1. US Energy Information Administration, “Country Energy Profiles: Venezuela”, US Energy Information Administration, ).
  2. 1 2 3 4 Anibal Martinez (1969). Chronology of Venezuelan Oil. Purnell and Sons LTD.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Gustavo Coronel (1983). The Nationalization of the Venezuelan Oil Industry. Heath and Company.
  4. The Royal Dutch ­ Shell Group of Companies in Venezuela, 1913-1922
  5. 1 2 3 Miguel Tinker Salas, The Enduring Legacy: Oil, Culture, and Society in Venezuela(United States: Duke University Press, 2009), 6.
  6. Daniel Yergin, The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power [Simon and Schuster, 1990], pp. 233–236; 432
  7. Franklin Tugwell (1975). The Politics of Oil in Venezuela. Stanford University Press.
  8. Painter 2012, p. 26.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Gregory Wilpert, “The Economy, Culture, and Politics of Oil in Venezuela”, Venezuelanalysis.com, http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/74.
  10. Suburban Emergency Management Project, “History of Venezuela’s Oil and Rentier Economy”, Suburban Emergency Management Project.
  11. Yergin, p. 435
  12. Jose Toro-Hardy (1994). Oil: Venezuela and the Persian Gulf. Editorial Panapo.
  13. Daniel Yergin (1991). The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power. Simon and Schuster.
  14. Vegard Bye, "Nationalization of Oil in Venezuela: Re-defined Dependence and Legitimization of Imperialism", Journal of Peace Research, 16, no. 1 (1979): 67, accessed December 3, 2014.
  15. 1 2 Bye, "Nationalization of Oil in Venezuela:Re-defined Dependence and Legitimization of Imperialism", p. 67.
  16. Useem, Jerry (3 February 2003). "'The Devil's Excrement'". Fortune.
  17. 1 2 Venezuela peak
  18. World Development Report 2000/2001. p. 297.
  19. Bernard Mommer (2001). Venezuelan Oil Politics at the Crossroads. Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, Monthly Commentary.
  20. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Corrales, Javier (7 March 2013). "The House That Chavez Built". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  21. Egan, Matt (12 July 2016). "Why Venezuela's oil production plunged to a 13-year low". CNNMoney. Retrieved 14 July 2016.
  22. Sheridan Titman, “The Future Oil Production in Venezuela”, blogs.mccombs.utexas.edu, 23 March 2010.
  23. ""Pdvsa is the government's piggy-bank," a U.S. official says". El Universal. 29 June 2004. Retrieved 28 June 2014.
  24. 1 2 3 Siegel, Robert (25 December 2014). "For Venezuela, Drop In Global Oil Prices Could Be Catastrophic". NPR. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  25. 1 2 3 Scharfenberg, Ewald (1 February 2015). "Volver a ser pobre en Venezuela". El Pais. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  26. Lansberg-Rodríguez, Daniel (15 March 2015). "Coup Fatigue in Caracas". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  27. "Inflation rate (consumer prices)". CIA World Factbook. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  28. "Venezuela's economy: Medieval policies". The Economist. 20 August 2011. Retrieved 23 February 2014.
  29. Corrales, Javier; Penfold, Michael (2 April 2015). Dragon in the Tropics: The Legacy of Hugo Chávez. Brookings Institution Press. p. 7. ISBN 0815725930.
  30. 1 2 Kevin Voigt (6 March 2013). "Chavez leaves Venezuelan economy more equal, less stable". CNN. Retrieved 6 March 2013.
  31. Jan Kalicki, David Goldwyn (2005). Energy and Security. Woodrow Wilson Center Press.
  32. 1 2 3 4 Nelson, Brian A. (2009). The silence and the scorpion : the coup against Chávez and the making of modern Venezuela (online ed.). New York: Nation Books. pp. 1–8. ISBN 1568584180.
  33. Nelson, Brian A. (2009). The silence and the scorpion : the coup against Chávez and the making of modern Venezuela (online ed.). New York: Nation Books. pp. 40–41. ISBN 1568584180.
  34. Cesar J. Alvarez, “Venezuela’s Oil-Based Economy”, Council on Foreign Relations.
  35. 1 2 3 Heritage, Andrew (December 2002). Financial Times World Desk Reference. Dorling Kindersley. pp. 618–621. ISBN 9780789488053.
  36. UN News Centre. "UN labour agency discusses repression in Myanmar, China, Colombia, Venezuela". Retrieved 12 September 2015.
  37. Venezuelanalysis.com. "Venezuela's economy shows strong signs of recovery after lock-out/strike". Retrieved 14 April 2008.
  38. Marijke van den Berg. ""Oil Chinese" in Venezuela are treading carefully". Retrieved 14 April 2008.
  39. Corrales, Javier; Romero, Carlos (2013). U.S.-Venezuela relations since the 1990s: coping with mid-level security threats. New York: Routledge. pp. 79–81. ISBN 0415895243.
  40. 1 2 3 Cannon, p. 87.
  41. "Venezuela Overview". World Bank. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  42. "Health expenditure, total (% of GDP)". World Bank. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  43. "Post-Chavez, Venezuela Enters a Downward Spiral". Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 21 February 2015.

References

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