Bolivia-Argentina-Brazil Summit Ends in Smiles Despite End of Cheap Gas

The leaders of Argentina and Brazil have accepted Bolivia’s oil and gas industry nationalization industry and have agreed to "fair and democratic" talks on future prices and foreign involvement.

The deal was reached at an energy summit in Puerto Iguazú, next to the shared Argentine/Brazil Iguazú falls and also included President Hugo Chavez from Venezuela.

Last Monday, May 1st, President Evo Morales took control of Bolivia’s energy industry including natural gas resources and told foreign corporations they will have to comply with new conditions or leave if they are not satisfied.

Brazil and Argentina, which rely heavily on cheap gas imports from Bolivia fear that nationalization could push prices up distorting economic basics.

"The important thing is that gas supplies for the countries needing them have been guaranteed and that prices will be discussed in the most democratic form possible between all parties involved," Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said following the meeting.

In spite of President Morales repeated warnings of "historic" changes regarding his country’s resources and commitment to honor campaign promises, last Monday’s decision to take over Bolivia’s energy industry apparently surprised Argentina and Brazil.

The urgently convened summit begun with stiff faces but after several hours’ discussions ended with a conciliatory tone emphasizing on Venezuela’s Pharaonic project of a pipeline crisscrossing South America to provide cheap gas to the whole continent; a project which involves almost US$ 20 billions and with no finishing date in the horizon.

Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez has South America’s largest reserves of oil and gas, and has pledged to help Bolivia in the nationalization of its own energy industry.

The Bolivian government has said it will start renegotiating energy contracts with all foreign companies from next week with a 180 days deadline to reach an agreement or face eviction. They will be asked to hand over majority control of all Bolivian operations to the country’s state oil firm, Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscales Bolivianos.

State-owned Brazilian energy firm Petrobras, the largest foreign investor in Bolivian energy, had stated it would cancel further investments, but President Lula said this decision could be reversed after more negotiations.

Spanish giant Repsol, which has invested more than US$ 1 billion in Bolivia, said it plans to remain in the country and co-operate with Mr Morales’ government in spite of initial strong reactions supported by Spanish and EU officials.

Bolivia has South America’s second largest gas reserves behind Venezuela and the nationalization process comes on the heels of a similar policy in Venezuela forcing foreign corporations to become minority partners of the country’s oil company, PDVSA, and in Ecuador which imposed heavy windfall profit taxes on international companies operating in the Amazon basin.

Mercopress – www.mercopress.com

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil: Domestic Abuse Ends in the Hospital

The Brazilian government has made it mandatory for hospitals and first aid stations to ...

Calendar

President Fernando Henrique Cardoso unabashedly stands by everything he ever wrote and insists that, ...

Candombé ceremony in Brazil

In Brazil You Dance to Play and You Dance to Pray

There are few countries around the world in which dance takes a center stage ...

Cheaper Dollar Spurs Raw Material Imports by Brazil

Brazilian industry is importing more raw materials, according to a study by Brazil’s  National ...

Brazil’s Reserves Fall Close to US$ 1 Billion

Brazil’s total current accounts (covering all international financial transactions) had a surplus of US$ ...

Cicex Wants to Be Brazil Exporter’s Right Hand

The Brazilian Minister of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade, Luiz Fernando Furlan, inaugurated yesterday ...

To Not Save Uncontacted Brazilian Indians Is Genocide, Says Survival

A small tribe of uncontacted Indians in the Brazilian Amazon is facing annihilation as ...

Low Inflation Keeps Brazilian Market Jumping

Latin American stocks gained ground, with Brazilian shares attracting buyers on encouraging inflation data. ...

LETTERS

While in the U.S. payroll costs to employers are 9% over the cost of ...

Lula Calls on Africa to Join Brazil to Fight the Rich

The joint effort of Brazil and African countries in the World Trade Organization (WTO), ...