Via Energy Daily, details on Cuba’s recent efforts to negotiate oil exploration and production deals with Russia, China and Angola, with its focus on Moscow shaping up as the partnership that could make the communist island nation energy self-sufficient. As the article notes:
“…The Cuban oil industry’s venturing out into deep sea waters in the Gulf of Mexico very likely will result in an increase in (Cuba’s) oil production,” Basic Industry Minister Manuel Marrero said on announcing that state oil firm Cubapetroleo (Cupet) was negotiating on 23 blocs with the three countries.
Energy dependence long has been Cuba’s Achilles’ heel.
Havana used to depend on the east bloc for cut-rate oil, and plunged into economic chaos and blackouts when it was cut off after 1989.
Now it depends on crude from ally Venezuela, but if Venezuelan supplies were cut off for any reason, that could spell deep political and economic trouble for the Americas’ only one-party communist state.
Locking in energy independence, aside from potentially turning Cuba from a cash-strapped developing nation into a flush oil exporter, could help project its current regime years into the future.
The exploration newly detailed by Havana would come in addition to other countries already betting on a Cuban black gold rush.
In 2000, Cuba divided its offshore exclusive economic area into 59 blocs, of which 21 have been assigned so far: Repsol (Spain), has teamed up with Hydro (Norway) and OVL (India), on six blocs; OVL is on its own in another two; and PDVSA (Venezuela), PetroVietnam and Petrona (Malaysia), each have four; while Brazil’s Petrobras has staked out one.
Meanwhile Canadian firms Sherritt and Peberco in the past eight months have pulled out of their deep-sea operations without any announcements here to explain their moves.
And Russia — a leading world oil producer — is considering exploration across 15 of the blocs, which would see Moscow hand-hold Havana as its top partner in the very costly process.
The remaining eight blocs would go to China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), its top oil firm, and Angola’s state oil concern Sonangol.
….Cuban authorities in October announced that the nation’s crude reserves were more than double what had been thought, and now were estimated to be about 20 billion barrels.
Repsol did the first drilling in 2005 but in a location its found was not commercially viable. In July, Repsol in association with the Norwegian and Indian companies, will drill another well.
Then, “at least … another seven drilling operations will take place” through 2012, said Marrero, who acknowledged “the challenge from the technological and financial point of view.”
To get its offshore operations in gear it needs a logistical center; that is being built at the port of Mariel, just west of Havana. But it still lacks capacity to process heavy crude.
In 2008, Cuba produced four million tonnes of petroeum and gas, officially about 47 percent of what it consumes. The remainder, about 95,000 barrels a day, it imports from Venezuela on favorable credit terms.”