Bolivia...
From
Renato Zambon@1:2320/100 to
All on Sat May 13 21:23:30 2006
O que falam da palha‡ada do g s na Bolivia...
e o Lula p/ variar nao ve nada de errado...
Unnatural disaster
May 6, 2006
BOLIVIAN PRESIDENT EVO MORALES put his head in an oven this week and
turned on the natural gas. There are only two likely outcomes: an
explosion that ends his political career _ or a slow suffocation for his people.
Morales' decision to nationalize Bolivia's energy sector was hardly
unexpected; he was elected in December after promising to do just that.
But it was a disappointment nonetheless to those who had hoped he'd
follow the path of wiser South American politicians such as Brazilian
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, whose leftist rhetoric keeps
supporters happy while his more centrist policies keep the economy
humming. Morales instead is running into the arms of Cuba's Fidel Castro
and Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, a direction likely to impose a heavy cost
on his impoverished nation of 9 million.
The problem with Bolivia is that it isn't Venezuela. The latter country
has gotten away with energy nationalization because it wields a lot of
power. As the world's fifth-biggest oil exporter, Venezuela is such a
big supplier that companies have little choice but to accede to its
demands. Bolivia has no such leverage. Its big resource is natural gas,
which is harder to transport than oil, so typically it stays in local
markets. Most of its gas exports go to Brazil, which recently discovered
large domestic reserves.
Foreign companies have long been wary about investing in Bolivia,
especially after the 2003 collapse of a project that should have assured
a healthy future for the country. Spanish and British oil companies had proposed a $5-billion pipeline to carry natural gas from landlocked
Bolivia to the coast of Chile, where it would be liquefied and shipped
to Mexico and California. But the plan provoked furious protests in a
Bolivian population still angry at Chile for seizing what used to be
Bolivia's coastline in the 19th century. Morales helped lead the protest movement.
After investing $3.5 billion in Bolivia's natural gas industry, foreign companies are now likely to stop investing entirely unless Morales backs
off from his plan to seize 82% of gas production from the largest
fields. Their loss would be disastrous for Bolivia because its
state-owned gas company is in no position to extract and export the gas
itself. Petrobras, Brazil's state-owned energy company, has already
suspended investment and said it will look for alternative supplies for
Brazil.
Paying the price for Morales' rashness will be the people who elected
him, and they can ill afford it; Bolivia is the poorest nation in South America. It's true that the country's resources have long been exploited
by foreigners with little benefit to the indigenous population. But
sending in the army to take over the gas fields isn't the answer to
Bolivia's problems.
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