Originally published Friday, September 30, 2005 at 12:00 AM
Venezuela's Chávez guarantees South Americans fuel
President Hugo Chávez said yesterday he wants to share his country's oil wealth with every nation in South America, in a move that...
The Associated Press
CARACAS, Venezuela — President Hugo Chávez said yesterday he wants to share his country's oil wealth with every nation in South America, in a move that aims to strengthen alliances in the region on the back of surging energy prices.
Chávez, a close ally of Cuban leader Fidel Castro, said his country had enough resources to help the region for generations to come.
"With this mission of energy integration, Venezuela guarantees petroleum and gas for the South American continent for at least 200 years," Chávez said as he arrived for a South American summit in Brazil's capital of Brasília.
Venezuela's "Petroamerica" initiative is a rival to the U.S.-backed Free Trade Area of the Americas. It integrates previous oil projects Petrosur, Petrocaribe and Petroandina, under which Venezuela agreed to sell fuel to other countries in the region on preferential terms.
Chávez has said the energy alliances will challenge U.S. economic domination in the region, and distribute fuel directly to avoid costly intermediaries.
Venezuela and Brazil will jointly exploit oil in the Orinoco tar belt, Chávez said, and further deals are planned with Argentina and Uruguay. Officials also announced yesterday that Brazil and Venezuela had agreed to share the cost of building a $2.5 billion refinery in Brazil to process up to 200,000 barrels of crude a day.
"Everyone on the continent is looking with a lot of interest," said Santiago Chávez, a trade official from Ecuador's embassy in Venezuela, after energy ministers from 12 South American countries signed a declaration in Caracas on Monday pledging to pursue the Petroamerica initiative.
In June, Chávez signed the Petrocaribe deal with 13 Caribbean countries to sell 190,000 barrels of fuel a day under terms that are expected to save them millions of dollars.
Eleven of those countries have since signed more specific deals allowing them to pay a portion of their debt up front and finance the rest over 25 years at low interest rates. Venezuela also has said they can pay some debts with goods such as rice, bananas or sugar.
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