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20 Billion Barrel oil discovery in Cuba may bring country to "big leagues"

CougarKing

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Greatttttt. Raul Castro may now claim to be as powerful as Chavez. ::)

20bn barrel oil discovery puts Cuba in the big league
• Self-reliance beckons for communist state
• Estimate means reserves are on a par with USRory Carroll, Latin America correspondent The Guardian, Saturday October 18 2008 Article history
A worker walks at an oil rig in Havana, Cuba. Photograph: Enrique De La Osa/Reuters

Friends and foes have called Cuba many things - a progressive beacon, a quixotic underdog, an oppressive tyranny - but no one has called it lucky, until now .

Mother nature, it emerged this week, appears to have blessed the island with enough oil reserves to vault it into the ranks of energy powers. The government announced there may be more than 20bn barrels of recoverable oil in offshore fields in Cuba's share of the Gulf of Mexico, more than twice the previous estimate.

If confirmed, it puts Cuba's reserves on par with those of the US and into the world's top 20. Drilling is expected to start next year by Cuba's state oil company Cubapetroleo, or Cupet.

"It would change their whole equation. The government would have more money and no longer be dependent on foreign oil," said Kirby Jones, founder of the Washington-based US-Cuba Trade Association. "It could join the club of oil exporting nations."

"We have more data. I'm almost certain that if they ask for all the data we have, (their estimate) is going to grow considerably," said Cupet's exploration manager, Rafael Tenreyro Perez.

Havana based its dramatically higher estimate mainly on comparisons with oil output from similar geological structures off the coasts of Mexico and the US. Cuba's undersea geology was "very similar" to Mexico's giant Cantarell oil field in the Bay of Campeche, said Tenreyro.

A consortium of companies led by Spain's Repsol had tested wells and were expected to begin drilling the first production well in mid-2009, and possibly several more later in the year, he said.

Cuba currently produces about 60,000 barrels of oil daily, covering almost half of its needs, and imports the rest from Venezuela in return for Cuban doctors and sports instructors. Even that barter system puts a strain on an impoverished economy in which Cubans earn an average monthly salary of $20.

Subsidised grocery staples, health care and education help make ends meet but an old joke - that the three biggest failings of the revolution are breakfast, lunch and dinner - still does the rounds. Last month hardships were compounded by tropical storms that shredded crops and devastated coastal towns.

"This news about the oil reserves could not have come at a better time for the regime," said Jonathan Benjamin-Alvarado, a Cuba energy specialist at the University of Nebraska.

However there is little prospect of Cuba becoming a communist version of Kuwait. Its oil is more than a mile deep under the ocean and difficult and expensive to extract. The four-decade-old US economic embargo prevents several of Cuba's potential oil partners - notably Brazil, Norway and Spain - from using valuable first-generation technology.

"You're looking at three to five years minimum before any meaningful returns," said Benjamin-Alvarado.

Even so, Cuba is a master at stretching resources. President Raul Castro, who took over from brother Fidel, has promised to deliver improvements to daily life to shore up the legitimacy of the revolution as it approaches its 50th anniversary.

Cuba's unexpected arrival into the big oil league could increase pressure on the next administration to loosen the embargo to let US oil companies participate in the bonanza and reduce US dependency on the middle east, said Jones. "Up until now the embargo did not really impact on us in a substantive, strategic way. Oil is different. It's something we need and want."
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/oct/18/cuban-oil
 
Alright, now I am getting mad.

Only problem is who should I be mad at.  The Club of Rome that for 30 years of my life has been telling me we are running out of oil?  Or the Oil Producers that like DeBeers Diamonds, have been sitting on their riches in order to control the price?

Obviously it has to one or the other.  Doesn't it?
 
I notice the article fails to mention that Canadian energy companies are already working with the Cuban government on developing their oil reserves...

 
Given the primitive economy and corrupt nature of the Cuban regime, I suspect the extra revenues from oil will have the same perverse effects as resource wealth has had on places as diverse as Kuwait, Venezuela or Saudi Arabia.
 
I wonder how the US will react? They will probably want to be buddy-buddy with Cuba now. :-\
 
Speculation:  Raoul Nationalizes the Oil Industry in Cuba and the people see no benefits of the the monies coming in.  The People rise up and throw Communism out of power.  Expatriate Cubans return home.  Capitalism flourishes.  Tourism rises.  ................................
 
The Castro brother proved too resilient.  They will bring in the Chinese or Venezuelans to exploit the oil.  Once they get the oil flowing it will be difficult to get them or their appointed successors out without outside help.
 
Another update:

Russia is to begin oil exploration in the Gulf of Mexico, after signing a deal with Cuba, says Cuban state media.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin signed four contracts securing exploration rights in Cuba's economic zone in the Gulf.

Havana says there may be some 20bn barrels of oil of its coast but the US puts that estimate at five billion.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8175704.stm
 
CougarDaddy said:
Another update:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8175704.stm

Actually, if you read the very last line in the linked article...

The US Geological Survey (USGS) recently estimated that as much as 9bn barrels of oil and 21 trillion cubic feet of natural gas could lie within that zone, in the North Cuba Basin.

:-\
 
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