US Imports Less Oil From Venezuela

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Apr 25, 2002
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CARACAS, Venezuela - U.S. imports of Venezuelan oil and oil products fell by 11.7 percent to a five-year low in the first four months of the year, the U.S. government said Monday, while Venezuela boosted oil shipments to its budding ally, China, instead.

The U.S. imported an average 1.13 million barrels of crude and petroleum products a day from Venezuela in the first four months of 2008, from about 1.28 million barrels a day in the same period last year, U.S. Energy Information Administration figures show. The last time U.S. imports were that low, a strike had paralyzed Venezuela's oil industry in 2002-2003.

The decline comes as U.S. crude imports are falling across the board, and amid efforts by Venezuelan state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela SA, or PDVSA, to cut its reliance on the U.S. by seeking new markets in China and India, energy analysts said.

Yet PDVSA's output may also be stagnating. The company says it produces an average 3.2 million barrels a day, but the Paris-based International Energy Administration put production at about 2.4 million barrels a day in the first four months of the year — slightly less than the same period last year.
High prices are meanwhile slowing demand for gasoline and fuel imports in the U.S., said Leo Drollas, chief economist at the Center for Global Energy Studies in London.

U.S. imports of Venezuelan crude oil fell 7.4 percent to an average 990,000 barrels per day in the first four months of the year, while imports of Venezuelan petroleum products fell 32.7 percent to an average 144,000 barrels per day, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said.

Last year, PDVSA sent nearly 60 percent of its total exports to the U.S., up 3 percent over a year earlier. Its total exports meanwhile fell by 6.2 percent.
President Hugo Chavez has repeatedly stressed Venezuela's need to slash that reliance and diversify its oil market, warning that the U.S. "empire" is planning to invade Venezuela and threatening to suspend exports.

PDVSA has accordingly boosted oil shipments to China, sending 250,000 barrels of oil to the Asian giant each day as of April, and aiming to reach 500,000 barrels a day by 2010. The company has also formed joint ventures with Chinese, Iranian, and Brazilian oil companies, and provides subsidized fuel to Latin American allies including Cuba and Nicaragua.

Venezuela is exploring investments in oil refineries in Brazil, Nicaragua, Ecuador and other countries. Demand for refined products is soaring in Venezuela, where car sales are booming and gasoline costs 12 cents a gallon (3 cents a liter), among the cheapest in the world.

Some suggest Venezuela's limited refining capacity will keep it dependent on the U.S., where roughly a third of PDVSA's extra-heavy crude was refined in 2007.

"Venezuela, for better or worse, remains dependent on the U.S. as its primary natural market," said Patrick Esteruelas, a New York-based Latin America analyst for the Eurasia Group.
 
Apr 25, 2002
15,044
157
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#3
invade Venezuela !!!!
Working on it . . .


US fleet on Latin American patrol


The United States Fourth Naval Fleet has resumed operations off the Caribbean and the length of Latin America for the first time since 1950.


Adm Stavridis said the fleet would support counter-terrorism efforts

The US Department of Defense says the measure is aimed at building confidence and trust in the region by focussing on common threats.

But some leaders in the region are concerned by the move.

Bolivian President Evo Morales has dubbed the initiative the Fourth Fleet of intervention.

Cuban former President Fidel Castro has written that the aircraft carriers were a threat that would sow terror.

Fighting trafficking

Based in Florida, the fleet will include various ships, including aircraft carriers and submarines and will patrol waters from the Caribbean and along the length of Latin America's coastline.

The fleet will help fight drug traffickers and work on humanitarian and diplomatic exercises.

The head of the US Southern Command, Adm James Stavridis, told Congress in March that he supported plans for a fleet led by a nuclear aircraft carrier to back counter-terrorism operations.

"Re-establishing the Fourth Fleet recognizes the immense importance of maritime security in the southern part of the Western Hemisphere," said Chief of Naval Operations Adm Gary Roughead.

But the growing number of anti-US leaders in Latin America are asking questions about the new measure, says BBC Latin America correspondent Daniel Schweimler.

Washington has become concerned by increasing anti-US rhetoric and the build-up of military forces, especially in Venezuela, our correspondent adds.

The US Navy also has operational fleets in the Pacific, the Persian Gulf and off the coast of Asia.

The Fourth Fleet was created during the Second World War to combat German U-boats targeting merchant shipping lines in the South Atlantic.

But when the war ended the fleet was deemed to be no longer necessary and was disbanded in 1950.