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To: Platter who wrote (32856)12/15/1998 11:43:00 AM
From: Tomas  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 95453
 
Venezuela outlines oil policy

Venezuela's Rodriguez outlines oil policy - MEES
December 15, 1998
NICOSIA, Reuters [WS]

Ali Rodriguez, who is tipped for the post of
oil minister in Venezuela's new administration,
said in remarks published on Monday that
the OPEC giant will work to reunite the
fading cartel and enlarge it if possible.

''Our objective is to strengthen and reunite
OPEC, and if possible, enlarge the
organisation,'' he told the Middle East
Economic Survey (MEES) in an interview at
OPEC's winter meeting in Vienna last month.

Rodriguez is a top oil adviser to Venezuelan
President-elect Hugo Chavez and is widely
expected to be the country's next energy
and mines minister.

Chavez has created waves in the
international oil world with some radical ideas
to shake up energy policy in OPEC power
Venezuela, the world's third biggest exporter.

He has promised closer ties with the
Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries
and has vowed to sack Luis Giusti, the
internationally acclaimed president of
Venezuelan state oil company Petroleos de
Venezuela (PDVSA), whom he blames for
contributing to this year's oil price crash.

Rodriguez said OPEC had no choice but to
reach consensus. ''If there were no OPEC,
we would have a price war. This would be a
disaster for the producing countries,''
Rodriguez told MEES.

"The objectives are to limit production in
order to defend prices but eventually to recover
the organisation's market share," he added.

Rodriguez said the question of price should
be discussed jointly with that of expanding
OPEC's market share. ''This would be our
commitment to the organisation,'' he said.

Rodriguez said a new OPEC market share
policy could only be formulated after several
obstacles were overcome -- low demand,
high inventories and the lack of full
implementation of previous OPEC
agreements.

''Projections available to us indicate that
demand will be depressed until the year 2001.
What is required is a long-term strategy
rather than short-term reactions. Meanwhile,
and at the end of the day, wehave to
adjust to market conditions,'' he said.

Rodriguez said that OPEC members' production
capacity plans should be discussed within
the organisation because ''it does not make
sense for one country alone to sacrifice
its interests to the benefit of others.''

''Is it justifiable for OPEC member states to
raise production capacity in light of the
depressed world oil demand?,'' Rodriguez asked.

Turning to the Chavez administration's policy
on PDVSA, Rodriguez said that in light of the
domestic economic situation, ''it is not
possible for PDVSA to achieve a capacity of
6.2 million barrels per day by the year 2005.''

He added that local conditions do not
support a $65 billion development plan by the
company and that oil policy ''will have to be
made by the Ministry of Oil.''

The new administration will impose changes
in PDVSA ''but not so dramatic or big as to
provoke a disorder,'' Rodriguez said.

He said the government will scrupulously
respect all upstream agreements signed with
international firms under the Oil Opening
Policy but that the scheme favoured
international investment.

Rodriguez said the Chavez administration will
change this course of policy and support the
Venezuelan private sector in upstream and
service industries.