The Weekend Economist "Quaerere Verum"

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Showing posts with label Castro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Castro. Show all posts

Saturday, June 2, 2007

#66 Vietnam Positions Herself as a Global Oil Player

As does any other rapid growth country not blessed (or cursed; depends on who you ask) with oil, Vietnam needs to find her black gold elsewhere. While China and India have been roaming the world - particularly Africa - for oil contracts for a while now, it is now Vietnam's time to follow suit. Vietnam Oil and Gas Corp., or PetroVietnam, pledged to expand its overseas oil exploration venture with two contracts this year, one in Cuba and the other in Nigeria. Oil agreements in Libya and Sudan are also on the cards, but rank lower in priority due to difficulties encountered such as lack of regulatory structure.

During a recent visit to Cuba by Vietnamese Communist Party chief Nong Duc Manh, the first of the two promises has now been honoured. Cuban and Vietnamese officials signed an agreement last Friday, 1 June, between state oil companies Cuba Petroleos and Petrovietnam calling for a partnership for exploration and drilling both in the Gulf of Mexico and on shore (photo courtesy of AP). PetroVietnam follows in the footsteps of other international oil companies such as Spain’s Repsol YPF S.A., Norway’s Norsk Hydro ASA and India’s Oil & Natural Gas Corp. Cuba divided its offshore area into 59 exploration blocks in 2000, of which just over 20 blocks have been leased to international companies.

The drilling in Cuba is not without financial risk, as it is not certain that they will find anything near the amount they might have access to in their other target partner country, Nigeria. Cuba currently produces about 80,000 barrels of crude oil a day, compared to Nigeria's whopping 2.2 million barrels per day in 2001. Nevertheless, oil exploration in Cuba is bound to be a safer bet for Vietnam, given that just 1 day after the agreement signed in Cuba, the umpteenth abduction occurred overnight at the U.S.-based oil-services firm Schlumberger Ltd. in Port Harcourt, Nigeria. One Dutch, one British and one Pakistani citizen, as well as another captive were taken hostage according to Rivers State Police Commissioner Felix Ogbaudu.

In other news, for the first time in ten months (when emergency surgery forced him to hand over power to his brother Raul Castro), Cuban leader Fidel Castro was shown standing and talking in video footage that aired on state-run Cuban TV. Castro was seen on Sunday, 3 June in a meeting with Vietnamese Communist Party chief Nong Duc Manh (picture on the right courtesy of Cuba's Juventud Rebelde newspaper).

Sunday, April 22, 2007

#60 A Warrior Pur Sang

Do you remember the Watergate scandal? Or the Missile Crisis pitting US President John F. Kennedy and Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev? What about the Vietnam War or the recent Iraq invasion? I'm sure all our readers know Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, U.S. President George Bush Sr., Jr. and Iranian President Mahmood Ahmadinejad. Do they also know the leaders of a time long passed, such as Chile's Salvador Allende, China's Mao Zedong and America's Dwight D. Eisenhower? Most probably you do. So what is it that all these events and people have in common?

The answer is: Cuban President Fidel Castro has been in power to witness and deal with each and every one of these episodes and leaders, as well as scores of others. And despite the vast reports claiming his time has now finally come, it seems he might be around for a while longer.

It is unclear which illness (he suffered from intestinal bleeding and is believed to suffer from diverticular disease) the Cuban President is battling exactly, but there is little disputing his resolve and ability to deal with whatever challenge is thrown at his entity. Castro has survived numerous attempts on his life, prompting the British newspaper The Guardian to write an article about the matter and Channel 4 to make a documentary. They came to the conclusion that 638 ways have been devised by various parties - most notably the CIA - to assassinate him (for an interesting read on the 638 ways attempted to kill Fidel Castro, have a look at the Guardian's article on the subject). These include an exploding cigar, a poisonous ballpoint pen and a jar of cold cream containing poison pills. Castro fittingly responded to these numerous attempts by making what has become a legendary comment; "If surviving assassination attempts were an Olympic event, I would win the gold medal."

Attempts on his life haven't managed to kill him, old age doesn't seem to damage him too much and now it appears disease has failed as well. After what was considered to be a series of life threatening operations, rumours of Castro's death spread like wildfire. But little by little, pictures and videos emerged of a recovering Castro at the side of his main ally, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. Last week Castro even published an article denouncing U.S. plans to turn corn into ethanol as a means to create an alternative energy supply to oil. The most recent and puissant proof that Castro is on his way back to leading his country is the meeting he held with Wu Guanzheng, a member of the Chinese Communist Party's Politiburo.

The meeting with Wu is all the more substantial given that Castro received a letter from Chinese President Hu Jintao that delved, amongst other things, into economic issues. According to Chinese officials in Cuba, trade between the two countries has blossomed in recent years, growing to $1.8 billion last year, double that of 2005. Most of this trade is accounted for by Cuban imports of Chinese buses, locomotives and farm equipment and supplies. Cuba would very much like to capitalize on China's booming economy and overall growth, providing it with a golden opportunity to get the Cuban revolutionary engine back on steam.

Castro's Cuban revolutionary movement has survived many catastrophes - the most notable being the collapse of the Soviet Union - but survived them all. This is very much due to the unique leadership abilities of El Commandante. When it comes to Fidel Castro, never say die.


Thursday, April 19, 2007

#59 Divisive Ethanol

Ethanol has become the new "it" thing in terms of energy fashion. Whether you are a proponent of expanding ethanol production for energy use, believe it would be a disaster to do so, or if you could not care less about the topic, one thing is for sure: you have something to say about it. The scope of discussion on the topic extends far beyond merely energy, encompassing a wide array of sectors such as food, agriculture, energy, trade and the environment. No matter in what context ethanol is debated, it has become a particularly divisive topic.

The environmental field is one such area. High profile politicians, scientists and lobby groups such as the Renewable Fuels Association - the largest Washington ethanol lobby group - are touting it as a 'green' alternative to the heavy pollutant, gasoline. Others, such as Stanford University civil and environmental engineering professor Mark Jacobson, loudly dispute this claim. Jacobson conducted a study analyzing the environmental effects of switching to ethanol and concluded "It's not green in terms of air pollution...If you want to use ethanol, fine, but don't do it based on health grounds. It's no better than gasoline, apparently slightly worse." Green or not, ethanol has set the stage for a tough debate worthy of competing with the ever contentious notion of Global Warming.

At the top of the world's political echelons, ethanol has garnered a prominent and cosy space for itself as well. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, following the words of Cuban President Fidel Castro, has issued a stark warning against the use of ethanol as a main source of energy, warning there is a lack of arable land and arguing it will lead to food prices skyrocketing, subsequently causing mass starvation among the world's poor. Bush, on the other hand, has hailed ethanol as a fitting alternative to the American addiction to foreign oil, sealing a bilateral deal with the world's largest ethanol producer, Brazil. The fact that these two leaders disagree on something is far from surprising, of course. What is noteworthy, however, is the effect that ethanol is having on Chavez's relationship with Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (Lula), who Chavez considers to be a close ally.

At a Venezuelan hosted energy summit involving eight Latin American nations, Lula responded to Chavez's comments regarding massive production of ethanol in an unprecedentedly stark manner, saying “The truth is that biofuel is a way out for the poor countries of the world...Obviously there is no possibility of competition between food production and biofuel production...No one is going to stop planting rice to plant biofuels. The problem of food in the world now is not lack of production of food. It's a lack of income for people to buy food.” Chavez was seemingly taken aback by these statements, softening his position afterwards by insisting that his real objection is to the U.S. corn-based variety of the biofuel – not Brazilian ethanol produced with sugar cane. Nevertheless, ethanol has managed to become the first topic to create public disagreement between the two leaders.

Let's just hope that either the proponents of ethanol as a substitute or additive for oil are correct, or that other, cheaper, cleaner and less divisive methods will be found in the meanwhile. Divisive ethanol must not become a distraction for the real reasons - which are a plenty - that we are seeking alternatives to oil.