Venezuela Energy Outlook
Transcription
Venezuela Energy Outlook
Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Venezuela Energy Outlook TAXATION SYSTEM, MACROECONOMIC AND ENERGY OUTLOOK, INDUSTRIAL AND EXCHANGE POLICY IN VENEZUELA Bolivarian Hall Washington, DC October 31st, 2006 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Growing Gap Between Global Demand and Non-OPEC Supply Daily Production (mbopd) 120,000 120,000 The Growing Differential Between Non-OPEC Supply Capacity and Global Demand 100,000 100,000 80,000 80,000 60,000 60,000 40,000 40,000 20,000 Non OPEC Crude Oil Non-OPEC NGL Non-OPEC Oil Sands 1.1% Grow th 1.8% Grow th 2.4% Grow th 8 19 9 91 19 93 19 95 19 97 19 99 20 01 20 03 20 0 20 5 07 20 09 20 11 20 13 20 15 20 1 20 7 19 19 87 0 19 19 85 0 20,000 Source: PFC Energy, 2006 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Venezuela Oil & Gas Business Objectives • Increase and monetize Venezuela’s reserve base • Enhance Venezuela’s capabilities in Production and Refining • Convert the Orinoco Belt into a light crude oil reservoir • Be the #1 oil products exporter in the Western Hemisphere • Use Natural Gas first to satisfy the domestic market and second to be an effective tool for energy regional integration • Enhance infrastructure capabilities and connectivity • Enhance human talent in key core businesses • Speed up market diversification to emerging countries • Diversify supply base of technology, goods & services • Increase local content and endogenous development in operating areas Oil World Reserves Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Venezuela, including the Orinoco Belt, is the country with the world’s largest liquid hydrocarbon reserves (316 billion bbl) Total World Reserves 1,527 Billion Barrels Latin America (excluding Venezuela) 2% Asia Pacific 2% Europa 7 % Africa 7% Canada 13% Middle East & Iran 49% Venezuela 21% Venezuela Proved mmmbbl 80 Orinoco Belt (in process of certification) 236 316 Source: Oil & Gas Journal, December 2005 Oil Reserves Variation Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Million barrels -New Discoveries + 6,100 -Revisions New Reserves -Extension 2001 X- Heavy 45% Condensate Medium /Light 17% 16% 2004 X- Heavy 48% Heavy 22% Condensate /Light Medium 15% 15% Heavy 22% - 3,300 77,783 80,582 Production Reserves have increased a net 3.6% Source: PDVSA’s 20-F and Audited Report Natural Gas Reserves Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Venezuela has the potential to become the 4th largest country in gas reserves and the 1st country in gas reserves in the western hemisphere Western Hemisphere Reserves 715 Trillion Cubic Feet (TCF) Latin America 116 17% World Gas Reserves 6,312 Trillion Cubit Feet (TCF) North America 249 34% Iran 971 15% Russia 1680 Asia Pacific 27% 39% West Europe Qatar 911 14% Venezuela 350 49% Venezuela North America Africa Rest of Middle East Latin America 6% Venezuela TCF 151 152 350 - mmmboe 26.1 - Proved 34.3 - Estimated (Offshore) 60.4 Source: Oil & Gas Journal, December, 2005 Venezuela’s Total Hydrocarbon Production Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Venezuela’s production, including natural gas, exceeds 4 million bpd oil equivalent 5.0 4.0 MMBPDOE 4.1 4.2 4.1 4.0 3.8 3.6 16% Natural Gas 3.0 5% LPG & Condensates 19% Light 2.0 24% Medium 1.0 25% Heavy & XH (include 3rd party) 11% Third Party Crudes 0.0 2000 2001 2002 2003 Note: 1 barrel of Oil Equivalent (OE) = 5,800 cubic feet of natural gas 2004 2005 Source: 2000-2004 PDVSA’s 20-F, 2005 Est. Supply & Disposition of Liquid Hydrocarbons (mbd) Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela 2004 PDVSA 2005 3rd Parties Vnzla PDVSA 3rd Parties Vnzla Supply (Production of Liquid Hidrocarbons) PDVSA's Own Production Operating Service Agreements Extra-heavy Crude (less 8 API) Sub-total PDVSA's crude Orinoco Belt Associations (% PDVSA's Equity crude): Petrozuata (49.9%) PDVSA Cerro Negro (41.67%) PDVSA Sincor (38%) Ameriven / Corpoguanipa (30%) Sub-total Orinoco Belt Association LPG Total Production of Liquid Hidrocarbons 2,066 519 38 2,623 - 2,066 519 38 2,623 2,109 502 61 2,672 - 2,109 502 61 2,672 62 50 66 32 210 166 2,999 62 70 109 74 315 315 124 120 175 106 525 166 3,314 60 51 73 50 234 165 3,071 60 71 120 117 368 368 120 122 193 167 602 165 3,439 1,617 53 610 49 2,329 - 1,617 53 610 49 2,329 1,641 86 594 56 2,377 - 1,641 86 594 56 2,377 40 51 76 31 198 2,527 485 3,012 40 71 123 73 307 307 307 80 122 199 104 505 2,834 485 3,319 45 53 81 56 235 2,612 506 3,118 45 76 131 129 381 381 381 90 129 212 185 616 2,993 506 3,499 5 47 13 60 Disposition (Exports and Local Market) Crude Own Production Bitor (Orimulsion / Fuel Oil) Refined Products LPG Sub-total PDVSA's crude Orinoco Belt Associations: Petrozuata PDVSA Cerro Negro PDVSA Sincor Ameriven / Corpoguanipa Sub-total Orinoco Belt Association Total Exports Local Market Consumption Total Exports and Local Market Inventory change & volume net gains / (losses) 13 (8) PDVSA’s 2005 Crude's and Products Flow (mbd) Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela International Activity PDVSA’s Supply Disposition Local Market Consolidated Sales 506 2,628 Local Refineries Crude & LPG Production Refined Product Sales 1,156 Product Exports Refined Product Purchases (Wholesale) 650 Crude Spot Purchases 627 Crude Exports 1,831 1,472 Refineries Abroad 1,204 Crude Sales Venezuela’s Crude Oil Production Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela MMBPD 7.0 Risk Sharing Exploration 6.0 4.9 5.0 5.5 3.2 3.3 3.0 2.8 3.1 3.3 3.4 3.8 New JV & Projects Existing Joint Ventures 4.6 4.0 3.0 5.8 Operating Joint Partnerships 4.1 Own Operations 2.0 1.0 0.0 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 Source: 2000-2005 PODE, 2006-2012 PDVSA Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Business Plan 2006-2012 (billion US$) Total: 123.959 55.928 39.781 19.807 8.443 CAPEX: 75.735 OPEX: 48.224 PDVSA 3rd Parties Expenditures of PDVSA (billion US$) Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Total: 95.709 CAPEX OPEX 55.928 39.781 609 1.557 8.396 583 3,562 2,194 6,932 4637 925 3,010 109 680 552 6,146 2,444 16,699 93 161 615 Own Efforts Associations Faja New Businesses Faja Offshore Refining Deltaven 14,277 PDVSA Gas Mixed Companies Risk Agreements Exploration Distribution Venezuela PDV Marina 16,953 Own Efforts Associations Faja Mixed Companies Offshore Refining Deltaven 1089 595 2,891 PDVSA Gas New Businesses Faja Risk Agreements Exploration Distribution Venezuela PDV Marina Expenditures Third Parties (billion US$) Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Total: 28.250 CAPEX OPEX 19.807 8.443 1,496 889 1.083 2,892 5.703 8.067 3,459 1,882 Associations Faja Mixed Companies Offshore 1.575 New Businesses Faja Risk Agreements Refining 519 685 Associations Faja Mixed Companies Offshore New Businesses Faja Risk Agreements Summary: Capital Investment Plan 2006 - 2012 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela $MMM Medium Term Plan 2006-2012 Est. 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Total E&P Exploration 0.2 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.2 2.4 Production 1.9 2.5 2.6 2.4 2.4 2.5 2.2 2.1 16.7 Operating Joint Partnership's 0.6 0.7 0.7 0.5 0.5 0.4 0.2 0.1 3.1 Orinoco Belt 0.0 0.5 0.3 1.9 4.9 3.9 4.0 3.5 19.0 Profit Sharing Agreements 0.1 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.4 0.4 0.0 0.0 1.7 Gas 0.7 2.3 2.5 2.2 2.5 2.2 2.5 2.0 16.2 E&P Total 3.5 6.7 6.8 7.7 11.1 9.6 9.2 8.0 59.0 Refining 0.2 0.6 3.4 3.7 3.8 3.3 1.2 0.3 16.3 Others 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.6 0.5 0.0 2.1 4.1 7.5 10.4 11.6 15.3 13.5 10.8 8.3 77.4 TOTAL Production Schemes Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Key Drivers: Production Schemes Unconventional oil & gas drilling (fracture stimulation and horizontal drilling). Slant drilling/horizontal Drilling, commingle wells Secondary recovery Water & gas injection Private participant involved On offshore drilling and production by special rigs (jackups, drill ships, semi submersible) Onshore Traditional Areas Traditional Areas Orinoco Belt Offshore PDVSA 60 – 80% PDVSA 51% Third Parties Operate 100% PDVSA Private Participation (operates) 20 – 40% Own Operations Private Participation (operates) 49% Operating Joint Partnership Private Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela PDVSA FINANCIAL STATEMENT Income Statement (US $ million) Audited 2003 International Sales 2004 2005 44,178 60,972 81,105 961 1,227 1,408 1,450 2,558 3,217 46,589 64,757 85,730 21,016 24,649 32,979 Exploration & Production Expenses 9,400 13,492 14,763 Depreciation & Amortization 3,042 3,082 3,334 Royalties 6,428 9,247 13,318 684 456 190 1,175 1,764 1,937 41,745 52,690 66,521 4,844 12,067 19,209 249 1,242 6,909 Income Taxes 1,318 5,419 5,817 Net Income 3,277 5,406 6,483 Venezuela Sales Other Income Total Income Crude & Product Purchases Interest Expenses Other Expenses, Net Total Costs and Expenses Earnings before Taxes Social Development Expenses Source: PDVSA Audited Cash Contribution’s to the Nation Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Increase of contributions to the nation has been in proportion to windfall revenues 45 $ billion 38.9 40 32.6 35 30 27.5 Foreign Currency Revenues (cash) 25 FONDEN FONDESPA Social Programs Dividends 19.5 20 15 24.6 23.0 16.5 11.8 10 9.7 10.0 Royalties 5 Income Tax 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Exploration Indicators Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela 3.0 2.5 Costs of Exploration per barrel / Discovered Reserves % Exploration Succeed (1997 – 2003) $/bl 2.0 1.5 46 % 1.0 1.04 0.5 0.0 1993 12 % 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 Venezuela World Incl. revisions % Exploration Succeed (2003 – 2004) Venezuela 70 % Source : Lehman Brothers/ PDVSA Exploration Objective 2005 - 2012 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Million barrels -Exploration (8,600) -Revisions + 15,847 New Reserves -Extension 2005 X- Heavy 48% Condensate /Light Medium 14.5% 15.5% 81,307 2012 Heavy 22% - 12,920 Production Reserves will increase a net 3.6% 84,230 Exploration – Capital Investment Plan 2006 - 2012 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela $ Million 600 505 500 413 409 400 389 284 300 200 100 228 Main Activities 216 Km2 -515 of 2D seismic lines -21,530 Km2 of 3D seismic lines -219 exploratory wells 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 E&P: Quantification of Reserves Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Only 0.3% of the Orinoco Belt has been developed 1,360 Billion Barrels Estimated Remaining Estimated Reserves 1,044 77% Orinoco Belt To Be Quantified 236 17% CARABOBO BOYACA MACHETE Proved Developed 4.0 0.3% Proved 39 2.9% JUNIN AYACUCHO o c o n i r O R í o Total Area Orinoco Belt 55,314 Km2 Certification of Crude Oil Reserves by Independent Parties Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela 4 6 1 3 3 PETROZUATA Petrozuata 5 4 2 44 SINCOR 6 7 7 1 2 9 N VE 3 55 6 7 7 1 1 1 BITOR OCN 4 2 3 I ER INDIA 2 5 San Cristobal AM PAR QU E AGUAR NACIONAL O G UA RIQUIT O 1 4 N 3 3 8 Rio o co Or i n BRAZIL RUSSIA CHINA SPAIN RUSSIA IRAN Orinoco Belt Production Profile Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela 1400 MBPD 1,207 1200 1,138 New Development II 1000 New Development I 807 800 Initial Production 687 637 Optimization 600 Current Production – Strategic Associations 400 SINCOR 200 PETROZUATA Norway HAMACA CERRO NEGRO USA France 0 2005 2006 UK 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 USA 2012 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Quantification and Certification Project of Orinoco Oil Belt Reserves 2005 STAGES 2006 2007 2008 1T 2T 3T 4T 1T 2T 3T 4T 1T 2T 3T 4T 1T 2T 3T 4T Data Package Preparation Quantification and Certification of Reserves Ayacucho 7 Ayacucho 3 Junin 3 Junin sur Carabobo 1 Junin 4 Junin 7 - PDVSA stand-alone Carabobo (3 Blocks) - Service Companies Ayacucho (5 Blocks) Junin (6 Blocks) Boyacá (6 Blocks) - PDVSA & Companies with Mou´s executed between governments Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Canadian Tar Sands vs. Venezuelan FAJA Production Process: Surface Mining Production Process: Oil Drilling Description: Through a complex state of the art mining and production process, this bituminous sand is transformed into Heavy Petroleum Description: 9°API Crude oil produced under available technology, that is upgraded into 32°API Crude Estimated Recoverable Reserves Estimated Recoverable Reserves 170 Bbls 236 Bbls Estimated Production Cost Estimated Production Cost Production: US$ 25 / Barrel* + Upgrading cost ROI=10% @ $40/barrel < US$ 1 / Barrel Upgrading: US$ 4 / Barrel ROI>200% @ $40/barrel *Source: Wall Street Journal: As Prices Surge, Oil Giants Turn Sludge Into Gold 03.27.2006 Production – Traditional Areas Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela 4.5 MMBPD Business Plan 2006-2012 4.0 4.0 3.8 3.5 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 3.1 2.6 2.6 2.2 1.9 2.3 2.1 2.2 2.5 2.7 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 Source: 2000-2005 PODE, 2006-2012 PDVSA Own Operations – Capital Investment Plan 2006-2012 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela 3.0 $MMM 2.6 2.5 2.5 2.4 2.4 2.2 2.4 2.1 2.0 Total Total $16.7 $16.7 1.5 1.0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Source: 2000-2005 PODE, 2006-2012 PDVSA Production – Traditional Areas Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela DRILLING – RA/RC - RIGS/YEAR # WELLS 1500 1250 RIGS/YEAR TOTAL WELLS New: 6590 Ra/Rc: 8117 200 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 1000 750 500 250 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 DRILL Ra/Rc R/Y Infrastructure – Own Operations Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Capacity of Installed Infrastructure ● Transportation network: 3,113 Km of crude oil pipeline (28). Throughput Capacity 6,340 mbd 3,781 Km of gas pipelines Throughput Capacity 2,748 ● Storage capacity: 30 mmbbl (tank farms and shipping terminals). 50 mmbbl in storage tanks located in the Caribbean (Bonaire, the Bahamas & Curacao) ● Terminal Facilities: 9 maritime ports and 2 river ports Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Short Term Annual Training Programs (Fast Track) AGREEMENTS •Abalt Solution Inc •Canadian Petroleum Institute •Hidroex (Hydrocarbons Specialists) •Network of Excellent in Training •T.H. Hill Associates Inc. •Houston University •Well Control School de Venezuela 2005 - 2008 IFP MSc in Geosciences & Integrated Studies 117 Instituto Superior de Energía: MSc in E&P 78 Houston University: MSc in Petroleum Engineering 85 Robert Gordon University: MSc in O&G 180 University of Burgos & Complutense: Exec – MBA 333 TOTAL 793 Refining Assets Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela PDVSA has a total refining capacity of 3.2 MMBPD (Dec 2005) Refining Capacity in USA: 1,310 MBPD Lake Charles (100%) 425 MBPD Chalmette (50%) 92 MBPD Lemont (100%) 167 MBPD Refining Capacity in Europe: 259 MBPD Nynäs (50%) Sweden (2 refineries) UK (2 refineries) 29 MBPD Paulsboro (100%) 84 MBPD Lyondell (41%) 109 MBPD Rühr Oel (50%) Germany (4 refineries) 230 MBPD Saint Croix (50%) 248 MBPD (*) Sweeny Corpus Christi (100%) 157 MBPD (**) Isla 335 MBPD Refining Capacity in Venezuela 1,303 MBPD Bajo Grande 15 MBPD Savannah (100%) 28 MBPD (# % ) are PDVSA net interest (*) 50% Equity interest in a coker and vacuum crude distillation unit (**) Under lease Paraguaná Refining Complex-CRP 940 MBPD Puerto La Cruz 203 MBPD El Palito 140 MBPD San Roque 5 MBPD Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Domestic Refining EXISTING REFINERIES 1- CRP 940 MBPD - Adapt the refinery to meet future quality demands - Residuals to distillates conversion project - Downstream industrialization 1 2 3 4 6 5 2- RELP 140 MBPD Project for converting residuals into distillates - Conversion capacity increase - HDT Diesel – HDS VGO - New CCR 3- RPLC 200 MBPD - Conversion of residuals into distillates - Merey new desalting unit - Ethanol Fuel Project: Lead elimination from gasolines and gradual substitution of MTBE/ TAME with Ethanol NEW REFINERIES 4- Caripito Refinery – 50 MBPD Asphalt production 5- Cabruta Refinery- 400 MBPD Conversion of extra-heavy crudes into distillates 6- Santa Inés Refinery - 50 MBPD Fuel supply for the domestic market Refining - International Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Cienfuegos 70 Jamaica (50) 25 Cabruta 400 Santa Inés 50 Caripito 50 Brazil (200) 100 Capacity in Venezuela MMBD 2005 1.3 2012 1.8 International Capacity MMBD 2005 2.0 2012 2.3 Total : 3.3 4.1 Uruguay (50) Total Investment: 16.3 US$ bn Investment in Venezuela 14,2 (87%) Investment in Petroamerica 2,1 (13%) Offshore Natural Gas Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela More than 500,000 km² of Offshore Proved Reserves: 151 Trillion Cubic Feet (TCF) Potential: 196 TCF (50% Offshore) Gas Production: 6,300 Million CF/D Forecast 2010: 11,500 Million CF/D VENEZUELAN GULF Los Monjes CARIBEAN FRONT ATLANTIC FRONT NE FALCON DELTANA PLATFORM Delta Caribe Project - Eastern Venezuela Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Mariscal Sucre Project 14 TCF Export: 1000 MMCF CIGMA Plataforma Deltana Project 15 TCF LNG CU MA NA CARUPANO Río Caribe Gas / Condensate Corocoro 450 MMB 3TCF Guarapiche DeltaPescador Centro TUCUPITA Punta •B-1 Punta Pescador •B-2 •B-3 LT O BE C O N ORI •B-4 Great South Gas Pipeline •B-5 En estudio Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Assigned Blocks under Exploration Licensing Delta Caribe West – Rafael Urdaneta Project Future Exploration Licenses 27 TCF 7 mmmb ls 0,5 3 T mm CF mb Assigned Blocks ls CIGMA Project Master Plan Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela INDUSTRIAL PARK ACCOMMODATIONS CONSTRUCTION ADMINISTRATIVE AND CRUDE SERVICE BUILDINGS PROCESSING PETROCHEMICAL PRODUCTS CRUDE REFINING G.T.L. PETROCHEMICAL CRUDE PRODUCTS UPGRADING FERTILIZERS SOLIDS HANDLING POWER GENERATION RESERVES GÜIRIA GÜIRIA CONTAINERS GAS TREATMENT GAS CONTAINER DOCK LNG PLANTS PORT SERVICES PRODUCT TERMINAL SERVICE DOCK PETROCHEMICAL DOCK PHASES PERIOD I - IV 2004 - 2035 LAND LOTS IN USE 22 PHASE II PHASE III PHASE IV RESIDENTIAL AREA CRUDE AND PRODUCTS STORAGE PHASE I NET AREA (ha) 3200 LNG TERMINALS SERVICE LAND LOTS 8 SERVICE CORRIDORS (KM) 57 PROTECTED AREA SAFETY AREA CRUDE OIL EXPORTS BY DESTINATION (MBD) Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela 1443 1390 931 2006 2009 2012 North America 121 137 177 2006 2009 2012 Europe 765 965 710 150 290 469 2006 2009 2012 Asia 2006 2009 2012 Latin America MBD: Thousands Barrels per Day Total Exports Internationalization Spot Sales Orinoco Belt/New Agreements 2006 1671 1041 630 - 2009 2580 1254 1206 120 2012 3297 1344 1168 785 PRODUCTS EXPORTS BY DESTINATION (MBD) Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela 520 125 233 20 46 50 90 43 119 50 31 12 276 40 2006 117 2012 Europe 2006 2012 North America 484 32 30 93 50 93 234 45 25 121 43 310 2006 2012 Asia 2012 112 Latin America MBD: Thousands Barrels per Day 2006 50 Fuel Oil Jet Diesel Gasoline 2006 2012 158 102 183 160 82 205 469 388 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Regional Energy Integration Energy Agreements 1. 2. 3. SAN JOSÉ (80,0 Mbpd) CARACAS (146,5 Mbpd) PETROCARIBE (23,7 Mbpd) Name: Jamaica Refinery Capacity: 50 Mbpd Partners: PETROJAM (50%) – PDVSA (50%) Name: Cien Fuegos Refinery Capacity: 70 Mbpd Partners: PDVSA (100%) NOMBRE: Antonio Ricaurter Gas Pipeline PAÍSES: COLOMBIA, PANAMÁ, VENEZUELA Name: Great South American Gas Pipeline PAÍSES: ARGENTINA, BOLIVIA, BRASIL, PARAGUAY, URUGUAY Y VENEZUELA Name: Abreu de Lima Refinery Capacity: 200 Mbpd Partners: PETROBRAS (50%) – PDVSA (50%) Name: La Teja Refinery Capacity: 100 Mbpd Partners: ANCAP (50%) – PDVSA (50%) Venezuelan – Colombian Gas Pipeline Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela BALLENA Venezuela MARAUASAHU CUATRO VÍAS CARRAIPIA Golfo de Venezuela MAJAYURA EL CERRO El Tigre RIO LIMÓN Fuerte Mara TULÉ SILOÉ EMR RL La Concepción LOS CORTIJOS EMR RU BAJO GRANDE TRANSCARIBEAN GAS PIPELINE ANTONIO RICAURTE End Engineering End Procurement Start Construction Execution up to 2006: • Jobs: 902 (Direct: 243 / Indirect: 659) • Executed: 28 % • Engineering & Environmental licenses: Completed • Construction: Initiated July 06 installed 10 kms of pipelines and 150 kms already manufactured Start of the Project • Completion date: May 2007 • Total Investment: $ 335 Million • Total Job creation: 31,060 (4,490 direct / 26,570 indirect) Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Initial Start of Operations: 2012 (50 M m3/day) Designed Operational Capacity: 2017 (150 M m3/day) Estimated Investment (Class V): 20 Billion US$ Integration to the South Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela SUPPLY STRATEGY FOR THE CARIBBEAN The PETROCARIBE Initiative • Minimize Supply Disruption Risk • Provide Affordable Access to Energy • Minimize Transaction Costs • Ensure Minimum Level of Infrastructure • Foster Economic and Social Development Estimated Investment 2006-2012: $24 Million Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela • Termoelectric & Gas Plants – CADAFE Beyond Social Responsibility Development of the Agro-industrial and Metal-Mechanic Industries – CORPOCENTRO • Agronindustrial development • Highway José Antonio Páez • Guaire River Bassin Cleaing – SAMARN • Ezequiel Zamora Railraod (Caracas Middle Tuy) - IAFE Additional Resources Palavecino Plant - CADAFE Additional Resources Termozulia Combined Cycle - ENELVEN • Ezequiel Zamora Railraod (Caracas Middle Tuy) – IAFE • Guaire River Bassin Cleaing – SAMARN • Development of the Agro-industrial and Metal-Mechanic Industries – CORPOCENTRO Cement Plant - CVG José Antonio Páez Highway – Propatria 2000 Foundation José Antonio Páez Highway – Propatria 2000 Foundation José Antonio Páez Highway – Propatria 2000 Foundation • Additional Resources Fabricio Ojeda Plant – CADAFE • José Antonio Páez Highway – Propatria 2000 Foundation • José Antonio Páez Highway – Propatria 2000 Foundation • Masparro Hydroelectric Plan • Development of the Agro-Industrial and Metal-Mechanic Industries – CORPOCENTRO • José Antonio Páez Highway – Propatria 2000 Foundation • Additonal Resources Ezequiel Zamora Thermoelectric Plant – CADAFE • José Antonio Páez Highway – Propatria 2000 Foundation • Pulp and Paper Plant • National Iron and Steel Plant • Pipes Plant Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Venezuela View on Natural Resource Management Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Venezuela Political Approach on Energy • Restore the sovereign right of the resource owner • Reach equilibrium with fair return to investors and sustainable development to the resource owner • Enhance affordability, specially to those countries and communities most in need • Reduce and eliminate asymmetries in consumption • Promote energy integration • Restore Discipline to Supply Management • Foster a Dialogue Between Producers, Consumers and the Industry • Explore Ways to Assess and Achieve Fair Price • Enhance energy conservation and environmentalism Collapse of the Fiscal Regime Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Public Revenues - Gross Domestic Product Ratio 70% 66% 60% FISCAL EXPORT VALUE 50% 45% 40% DIV. 30% INCOME TAX 20% 10% ROYALTIES 0% 76 78 80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00 The governance of the Venezuelan oil was unsustainable, domestically and internationally Extent of US Companies’ Ability to Enter Market Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Can US Can a US Can US purchase company invest company obtain local oil in Refining/ equity oil? companies? Petrochemicals Can a US company market petroleum products? Only if Joint Venture Uncertain YES YES Kuwait NO NO YES YES Mexico NO NO NO YES Saudi Arabia NO NO YES YES Venezuela YES YES YES YES China Source: US Department of Energy; National Security Review of International Energy Requirements - February 2006 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Foreign Investment Rules of the Game TERMS Bolivia • In May, it nationalized its natural-gas industry, ordering foreign companies to give up control of fields and accept much more strict operating terms in 6 months or leave. • It declared that the state owns the gas after it has been extracted and that companies at the country's two largest fields would get 18% of the production. • In 2005, it had increased the state's take to 50% of production by raising taxes and royalties (WSJ). Ecuador • In April, it imposed a tax of 50% on the “extraordinary profits” earned by foreign investors in the oil sector. Prior to this, the rate was 20% (BBC, DOE). Libya • In 2005, the 2nd EPSA IV bidding round was fiercely competitive, with winning bidders forced to slash their production percentages as low as 6.8%. • In addition, oilfield developers initially bear 100% of costs (exploration, appraisal, training) for a minimum of 5 years, while Libya’s NOC retains exclusive ownership (DOE). Nigeria • An increase of taxes from 50% to 85% has been proposed (DOE). Russia • National participation of 51% in strategic projects; 90% taxes/royalties/duties on earnings above $25/bl (DOE). U.K. •A special charge on profit was recently raised to 20%, from 10%. It comes on top of a 30% tax applied to all U.K. corporate profits (WSJ). Venezuela • The new terms of the operating joint partnership (empresas mixtas) include a minimum 60% equity ownership by PDVSA, 33.3% royalty and 50% corporate tax. Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Government Take around the World Source: Wood Mackenzie Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Bilateral Energy Relation Venezuela – U.S. Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela ● ● ● The U.S. - Venezuela Energy Relationship Venezuela accounts of 12% to 15% of total US imports Venezuela is the 4th largest supplier of crude oil to the US Including exports to Virgin Islands, Venezuela was the 1st largest foreign supplier to the US Main Oil Suppliers to the USA (Crude + Products) 90,000 80,000 70,000 60,000 50,000 ● ● ● ● Venezuela is the 2nd largest exporter of oil products to the US Venezuela is 4 to 5 days shipping time to the US Venezuela purchases more than $2 billions per year of good & services from 800 U.S. companies Venezuela is one of the largest foreign investor in the US through its CITGO refining circuit 40,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 0 2000 2001 Venezuela 2002 Canada 2003 Mexico 2004 2005 Saudi Arabia Source: EIA 2006 Venezuela – CITGO Heating Oil Program 2006-2007 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Place: Massachusetts New York City Maine Rhode Island Pennsylvania Vermont Delaware Connecticut Tribus Indigenas (1) Washington, DC (2) Alaska (2) Maryland (2) Virginia (2) New Jersey (2) Indiana (2) Michigan (2) Wisconsin (2) Contingencia Total: (1) (2) Volume (gallons): 11.445.763 23.845.340 7.630.509 1.907.627 9.538.136 1.907.627 953.814 4.578.305 10.000.000 328.303 769.346 2.901.501 3.808.959 5.600.527 639.739 2.235.471 1.909.034 10.000.000 100.000.000 More than 220 tribes from Alaska, Minnesota, New York, Connecticut y Maine. New States and Cities. Households: 60.000 125.000 40.000 10.000 50.000 10.000 5.000 24.000 20.000 1.721 4.033 15.210 19.967 29.359 3.354 11.719 10.007 20.000 459.370 Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela The U.S. Oil Crisis and its approach to Venezuela • The U.S. is under tremendous pressure to access secure and reliable supply of oil • The U.S. energy independence is a myth and cannot be achieved under current consumption patterns, as the U.S. addiction to oil is highly related to quality-oflife perception, and it is less likely to change that pattern • The U.S. SPR proved not to be sufficiently efficient in times of crisis • Alternative energy (biofuel and ethanol) is a good sign, but will not be enough to offset the increase in consumption • Sources of oil in the Middle East will at the end and naturally be directed to satisfy the demand growth in Asia – Current geopolitics in this region proved not to be efficient to pop up more secure oil • The U.S. will have to rely on sustainable supply from within the hemisphere • Mexico is declining, Canada is not sufficient and Venezuela has the biggest reserves of oil in the world A cooperative approach between the U.S. and Latin America and specially Venezuela is indeed a sole guarantee for a sustainable energy security in the Hemisphere Embassy of the Bolivarian RepublicEmbassy of Venezuela of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela