Chavez at OPEC
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But what about fights
between multinational oil giants and the governments of oil-producing states
over control of resources? Do people who care about the environment and climate change have a
stake in these battles? It appears that they do, but most have not yet noticed
it.
Some background: the dispute
arose out of the Venezuelan government's decision to take a majority stake in
oil extraction, in accordance with its law. In 2005, it entered into
negotiations with foreign oil companies to purchase enough of their assets in order
to achieve a majority stake. Almost all the negotiations, with dozens of
companies, were successful – with only Exxon and ConocoPhillips going to
arbitration (Conoco is still negotiating).
Exxon adopted a strategy of
trying to make an example of Venezuela ,
so that no other government would try to mess with it. Exxon went to European
courts to freeze $12bn of Venezuelan assets, but this was reversed within a
matter of weeks. They also went to arbitration at the ICC, and at the World
Bank's arbitration panel, ICSID (the latter case still pending). But the ICC
gave Exxon much less than the Venezuelan government had reportedly offered it
in negotiations.
The decision was noted with
intense interests among oil industry specialists – and was seen by developing
country governments as an important victory for the developing world – but
didn't get much attention in the mass media. This is a big precedent – and, of
course, there are other countries that will continue to have disputes with oil
companies over control of resources.
Why should environmentalists
care? Well, for those of us who would like to slow the accumulation of
greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, we would like to keep more oil in the
ground. That is one reason why most environmentalists would support a carbon tax, which would
raise the price of carbon emissions. The main reason that Venezuela
insisted on a majority share in these oil projects is that it wants to control
production. Venezuela
is a member of Opec, and abides by the organization's quotas. If you want to
reduce climate disruption, then you have a big interest in whether governments
that want to reduce oil production are able to do so.
A higher price of oil due to
reduced production by oil-producing countries reduces oil consumption in the
same way that a carbon tax does. It also encourages the development of
non-fossil fuel alternatives, including solar and wind technologies, which
become more economically feasible at higher oil prices. (Of course, higher
prices do also encourage non-Opec countries to produce more oil, and Opec members
to cheat on the cartel, and a carbon tax would not have that same effect; but
this would be an argument for a stronger and more inclusive Opec.)
On the other side, our
adversaries have always had the goal of flooding the world with cheap oil,
which would greatly accelerate global warming. Before Hugo Chávez was
elected in Venezuela , the
national oil company (PDVSA) shared that goal with Washington . But as soon as he was elected,
Chávez successfully pushed Opec to reduce production, moving oil prices off
their deep low point of $11 a barrel in 1998. The US State Department, in a 2002
report (pdf), admitted that the US government "provided training,
institution-building, and other support to individuals and organizations
understood to be actively involved" in the militarycoup that briefly overthrew
Venezuela's elected government that year. That same report also stated
that one of the main reasons for Washington 's
"displeasure" with Chávez was "his involvement in the affairs of
the Venezuelan oil company and the potential impact of that on oil
prices".
Of course, it is not
politically popular for anyone to appear pro-Opec in the rich, oil-consuming
countries. But most environmentalists are willing to support policies, such as
a carbon tax, that are not necessarily going to win elections this year. So
they should also recognize that they have an immediate stake in the producing
states' struggle with multinational companies over control of fossil fuel and
other natural resources.
Mark Weisbrot is
Co-Director of the Center
for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), in Washington, DC. He is also
president of Just Foreign
Policy. He is co-author, with Dean Baker, of Social Security: The Phony Crisis. E-mail Mark: weisbrot@cepr.net
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