The search for oil in Cuba's Gulf of Mexico waters, launched by
the Spanish firm Repsol, has triggered speculation about future
prospects for Cuba and the possibility of this country one day
making the transition from importer to exporter of crude.
Cuba: Oil Drilling Opens Up New Possibilities
16 February 2012
Source: Inter Press
Service
The search for oil in Cuba's Gulf of Mexico waters, launched by
the Spanish firm Repsol, has triggered speculation about future
prospects for Cuba and the possibility of this country one day
making the transition from importer to exporter of crude.
Moreover, given its strategic importance for both the United
States and Cuba, some analysts believe that energy offers a
potential area for cooperation that could eventually help pave the
way to the normalisation of relations between the two
countries.
For the moment, the Cuban authorities and oil industry personnel
are remaining discreetly silent on the subject. CUPET, the
state-owned oil company, has limited itself to officially
confirming the arrival in the country on Jan. 19 of the Scarabeo 9
oil rig for "the resumption in the coming days of deepwater
drilling for oil exploration."
Drilling operations presumably began in late January. According
to CUPET, the goal is to continue testing to determine the
potential for oil and gas production in Cuba's exclusive economic
zone (EEZ) in the Gulf of Mexico. The results of the drilling will
contribute to defining that potential.
After opening up its economy to foreign investment in 1991, Cuba
divided the EEZ, which covers an area of 112,000 sq km, into 59 oil
and gas exploration blocks. On Jan. 18, Rafael Tenreiro, director
of exploration and production at CUPET, reiterated a previous
estimate of a potential 20,000 million barrels in the
area.
At the launching of the book "Perforación de pozos petroleros
marinos" ("Offshore Oil Well Drilling") by Rolando Fernández,
supervisor of the Gulf of Mexico operations group, Tenreiro stated
that it was "possible" that Cuba could become an oil
exporter.
"We have to prepare the country for this good news," he added,
stressing the need for the production of technology and
participation in the entire process.
In 2011, more than 20 offshore exploration blocks had already
been leased to large foreign energy companies, including, in
addition to Repsol, StatoilHydro of Norway, ONGC Videsh of India,
PETRONAS of Malaysia, PetroVietnam, Gazprom of Russia, Sonangol of
Angola the Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA.
Reflecting on the potential ramifications should Repsol's
exploratory drilling prove successful, university professor
Fernando Martirena told IPS that large-scale development of the
Cuban oil industry would obviously provide a boost to the
government programmes currently underway, since it would represent
"a needed injection of fresh foreign currency into a tense national
economy."
This scenario, "combined with the package of measures being
implemented as a result of the 'updating' of the Cuban economic
model, will heat up the issue of the blockade," said Martirena.
Under the U.S. economic embargo against this Caribbean island
nation, in place for 50 years this month, U.S. companies are shut
out from profiting from a potential oil boom in Cuba.
In Martirena's view, if the U.S. Congress wants to be pragmatic,
"it will have to choose between continuing to support the
hysterical Cuban-American bloc that does so much lobbying around
the issue of the blockade, or simply accepting reality - that there
is no reason to maintain this policy."
Cuban-American members of Congress headed up by the chairwoman
of the influential House Foreign Affairs Committee, Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen, have attempted to block Repsol's drilling operations
in Cuban waters. While they claim that their opposition is based on
concerns for the environment and the security of the United States,
analysts believe that their motivation is primarily
political.
Before arriving in Cuban waters, the Scarabeo 9 drilling rig -
built in China and assembled in Singapore, and therefore exempt
from the prohibitions of the U.S. embargo - successfully passed
inspection by personnel from the U.S. Department of the Interior's
Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement and the U.S. Coast
Guard.
CUPET has also vouched that the cutting-edge equipment leased by
Repsol for its drilling operations has been duly verified to
include the necessary features to guarantee the utmost efficiency
and safety. The exploratory drilling is expected to last roughly
two and a half months.
"Technically speaking, the chances of a mishap occurring in
Cuba's economic area are extremely small, not only because of the
precautions taken, but also for purely statistical reasons. This is
one drilling rig out of the countless rigs operating outside of
Cuban waters" in the Gulf of Mexico, economist Luis René Fernández
commented to IPS.
An expert on Cuba-U.S. relations, Fernández noted that while
there are political risks associated with the issues of security
and environmental impacts, there are also experiences that indicate
that these "could and should be reduced."
"(Socialist) Venezuela has not stopped supplying oil to the
United States, although it has tried to diversity its markets," he
mentioned as an example.
He also pointed to the migration accords signed by Havana and
Washington and Cuba's purchases of food from U.S. companies despite
"all of the restrictions and limitations."
"In these cases, among the reasons for a certain type of
communication and collaboration, it always boils down to the
importance of geography. There are common issues in which it is
more beneficial for both sides to address them directly and even to
cooperate. Not doing so could have high costs, not only economic,
but also for the environment and security," he said.
Fernández stressed that the U.S. government is not a "unified
actor" and that there are different agencies that deal with matters
such as energy and the environment.
"There are experts and professionals who fulfil their missions
and could have real impacts on the concrete political situation,"
he said, due to geographical proximity but also because "it is
advisable to cooperate in spite of political and ideological
differences."
In his opinion, both countries are moving in the mid term and
especially in the long term towards the normalisation of relations,
regardless of the particular political circumstances in the United
States. "On the Cuban side, there is a well-known willingness to
cooperate and even to debate, on respectful and equal terms, all of
the aspects of the bilateral conflict," he stressed.
"This could be another important area for cooperation, precisely
because of the strategic significance of energy sources for both
the United States and Cuba. Are there risks? Without a doubt. But
the benefits of cooperation definitely outweigh them," Fernández
concluded.
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