THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: 32 Oil Pacts
Must Switch To New Venezuela Law: "ChevronTexaco, BP PLC, Repsol, Total,
Petrobras, Royal Dutch Shell and China National Petroleum Corp., or CNPC, all
operate projects that need to be migrated to the new law. Venezuela is the
world's fifth largest oil exporter and holds the largest oil reserves outside of
the Middle East." (ShellNews.net) Posted 15 April 05
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
CARACAS -- Private oil firms operating 32 oil production areas in Venezuela have
six months to switch the contracts to comply with a new law that includes higher
taxes and majority participation from state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela (PVZ.YY),
PdVSA President Rafael Ramirez said Thursday.
"Within six months, the operating agreements will be converted to mixed
companies under the new law," Ramirez said during a press conference.
Ramirez said the projects will pay a 30% royalty tax, and PdVSA will hold a 51%
stake in each project, all requirements included in the 2001 Hydrocarbons Law.
Ramirez didn't specify the current royalty rates, but said many of the projects
declare losses and pay no taxes.
If companies don't accept the new terms, Ramirez said other oil firms would be
interested in taking over the projects under the new terms.
"We would like the partners to remain the same ... but we have alternatives,"
said Ramirez.
An executive at an oil major operating one of the contracts said the company
will abide by the new regulations. The contracts were sold during three separate
licensing rounds in the 1990s, under terms Ramirez described as "illegal."
"We will comply with whatever the law says," said the executive, who asked not
to be named.
The Chavez administration has been pressuring oil firms to migrate to the new
law for more than a year.
"This is not a surprise," said the source.
Ramirez said PdVSA will have enough money to invest in the projects and maintain
output under the new partnership structure. PdVSA says the country is pumping
more than 3.1 million b/d, but analysts put the figure closer to 2.6 million
b/d, and say PdVSA isn't investing enough to ramp up production in the near
term.
The operating contracts currently produce 500,000 barrels of oil a day in
Venezuela, and Ramirez said the companies aren't paying enough in income taxes,
causing losses to the state oil company. He said PdVSA suffered accumulated
losses of $270 million last year due to the structure of the operating
agreements.
President Hugo Chavez said Wednesday that some of the operators may have to pay
back taxes, if a tax review reveals they underpaid.
Ramirez said the tax and partnership changes will not scare investors away from
new projects in Venezuela. Venezuela hopes to sell natural gas and heavy crude
licenses this year.
"The majority of companies understand this topic," said Ramirez.
He added that any new projects fall under oil and natural gas legislation
written by the Chavez administration, which will not be changed.
Some observers say oil firms, desperate for new reserves to develop, will
stomach the new changes and continue investing here.
"I don't think the industry is going to run away from Venezuela," said Roger
Tissot, an analyst with PFC Energy, a consultancy.
"If there is one thing they should have known, it is that this was going to
happen sooner or later."
He said ExxonMobil (XOM) is the only company involved in the operating contracts
that may fight the change. Exxon is the only firm out of five that produces
synthetic crude in the Orinoco tar belt that balked at a royalty hike last year.
"I wonder what ExxonMobil will do," said Tissot. "Basically, this is the second
royalty hike, and they were already fighting the first."
Ramirez said he hopes no firms choose to take the contracts to international
arbitration.
ChevronTexaco (CVX), BP PLC (BP), Repsol YPF SA (REP), Total (TOT), Petrobras (PBR),
Royal Dutch Shell (RD, SC), and China National Petroleum Corp., or CNPC, all
operate projects that need to be migrated to the new law.
Venezuela is the world's fifth largest oil exporter and holds the largest oil
reserves outside of the Middle East.
-By Peter Millard; Dow Jones Newswires; 58-212-564-1339;
peter.millard@dowjones.com
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