Marxism
mailing list archive

Other Periods  | Other mailing lists  | Search  ]

Date:  [ Previous  | Next  ]      Thread:  [ Previous  | Next  ]      Index:  [ Author  | Date  | Thread  ]

[Marxism] Heat Is On to Tackle Cuba's Power Crisis



(A detailed report which appears quite accuarate. Blackouts continue
to affect Cuba with annoying regularity from what I'm hearing lately.
Cuban television has been providing considerable coverage of Hurricane
Katrina's aftermath in the United States. They don't have to go out of
their way to demonstrate the obvious difference between the "save your
own skin" mentality which prevails in the United States and the Cuban
experrience where the government, when it orders people out of an area
threatened by hurricanes, also takes full responsibility and all of the
necessary practical measures to see to it that people's lives are saved
and that everyone gets out of harms way as soon as possible. It seems to
me this has begun to be somewhat of a Cuban domestic political problem.)
======================================================================

<http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-cubapower3sep03,1,12593
59.story>
Heat Is On to Tackle Cuba's Power Crisis
Faced with sporadic unrest prompted by blackouts in the sweltering summer,
Castro pledges to update the antiquated system.
By Carol J. Williams
Times Staff Writer

September 3, 2005

MIAMI ? Cuba appears to be limping out of its worst season of
blackouts since the collapse of the Soviet Union, but its economy may
be in its strongest state in decades to address the crisis, analysts
and experts said.

Beset by unusual protest during a sweltering summer, President Fidel
Castro has pledged to invest $250 million from booming tourism and
nickel ore revenue into the power system, and has entered into
generous deals with China and Venezuela aimed at averting collapse of
an obsolete and inefficient generation and transmission system.

Across the island, Cubans this summer weathered temperatures in the
90s and stifling humidity without lights, baseball game broadcasts or
their daily escape of soap operas.

Cuba watchers, meanwhile, are reading the crisis for its potential
effect on the 79-year-old Castro's hold over the country.

"The Cuban population is exasperated with frequent and lengthy
blackouts, increasing epidemics, growing transportation breakdowns
and the inability of the Castro government to provide meaningful
responses to these and other critical problems," said an August
report of the Cuba Transition Project, a working group at the
University of Miami's Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies.
The report was based on conversations with residents of Cuba and
recent visitors to the island.

"Reports of sporadic demonstrations and anti-government graffiti are
surfacing throughout the island," the report noted.

After two months of almost daily blackouts, the Cuban Politburo
member heading the Ministry for Basic Industries, Yadira Garcia Vera,
acknowledged in a televised address in July that the national power
system was "weak" and outages were likely to continue through summer.

"We fully understand the complexities this presents for families, for
the economy and for the country," she told Cubans. Garcia's
predecessor was fired after a similar spate of blackouts last year.

Few outside Castro's inner circle know whether the Cuban government
can afford to make the investments needed to improve power supply or
expand domestic oil production, said Kirby Jones, head of the
U.S.-Cuba Trade Assn.

"But they're seeing as good days as they've seen in a long time.
Tourism is up. Nickel income is up. Biotech, rum, cigars ? everything
is up," Jones said of the Cuban economy, which grew 13% last year and
is expected to expand 5% this year.

Castro's $250-million pledge, announced in July, will go toward the
purchase of large oil-fired generators from Denmark, Spain and
Germany, and improvements to 10,000 miles of power lines that experts
say lose an estimated 22% of their supply en route to consumers.

Castro also has been ordering spot repairs and conservation measures
such as the importation of energy-efficient rice steamers, pressure
cookers and lower-wattage light bulbs from China.

But economic analysts contend those moves are merely symbolic.
Billions will be needed to replace an electricity network of aging
Soviet-bloc equipment ineptly operated since Moscow ceased supplying
cheap fuel oil, they say. Cuba's high-sulfur domestic heavy crude,
substituted for Russian oil since 1994, has corroded machinery and
parts in its seven major generation plants that can't be replaced
because the Czech and East German suppliers went out of business
after the overthrow of communism.

"It's the Achilles heel of the whole system," said Jorge R. Piñon, a
retired oil industry executive who wrote an extensive report on
Cuba's energy crisis for the Transition Project. "As long as they
keep burning crude oil, they're going to collapse the system."

Venezuela has been providing as many as 90,000 barrels of oil a day
to Cuba under a deferred-payment scheme that shields the impoverished
economy from record oil prices, but has added another $3 billion to
the island's international debt, Piñon said. The U.S. State
Department estimates Cuba has a hard-currency debt of $11 billion.

The summer's crisis, however, may have laid bare Castro's previous
promises from the three-year-old Venezuela deal, as well as his
prospects for Chinese investment in oil exploration.

"The Cuban government was saying that with this great relationship
with Venezuela and investment from China, things are going to be
great," said Dan Erikson, a Cuba specialist at the Inter-American
Dialogue, an independent think tank in Washington. "But you have
outages as bad or worse than before and this has created discontent."

Mismanagement of the power network has also angered Cubans, he said,
describing the level of public complaining experienced during a visit
earlier this year as having reached "fever pitch."

"There's an incompetence role in this, not just the [U.S. trade]
embargo and the traditional woes of the Cuban economy," Erikson said.
"It's been an embarrassment for the Cuban government."

Apparently spurred by the sporadic outbreaks of unrest, Castro has
recently moved the power supply issue to the top of his agenda,
vowing an end to blackouts in part by increasing electrical output by
a third by next year.

Bandes, Venezuela's development bank, announced in early August it
would lend Cuba $20 million to upgrade its distribution network, but
made the use of Venezuelan contractors a condition of the loan. That
sum is less than half of what Bandes estimates the first phase of
transmission modernization will cost.

Meanwhile, Petroleo de Venezuela, the state-owned oil company, is
working with Union Cubapetroleo, or Cupet, to improve the quality of
oil fed to the power plants to halt their deterioration. The
Venezuelan company and Cupet also have been weighing whether to
finish and modernize the Soviet-built Cienfuegos refinery to process
Cuban crude and take in foreign shipments amid an international
shortage of refining capacity.

There are prospects for a major oil find in Cuba's exclusive economic
zone in the Gulf of Mexico, but it will still be years before the
current energy crisis is alleviated.

In the 13 years since Cuba began allowing foreign contractors to
explore its fields, nearly $2 billion has been invested, boosting oil
production from 18,000 barrels a day in 1992 to 75,500 barrels a day
last year, Piñon noted.

But that is less than half the 180,000 barrels a day Cuba consumes. A
Rice University report predicts the island will need 349,000 barrels
a day by 2015.

In February, China sold Cuba three directional drilling rigs and
signed a production sharing agreement with Cupet to explore further
onshore and coastal areas. Spain's Repsol has joined with Norway's
Norsk Hydro to spend $40 million next year to explore a promising
Gulf of Mexico deposit.

It remains to be seen whether international oil companies with
deep-water drilling expertise will conclude the effort is worth what
could amount to a $3-billion investment. A February U.S. Geological
Survey report on possible undiscovered deposits in the North Cuba
Basin estimated 4.6 billion barrels of oil ? and possibly as much as
9.3 billion barrels ? could be in the region.

The prospect of Cuba as a potential oil exporter would have important
economic and political consequences ? not the least of which is
whether Washington would permit U.S. companies to enter a market that
could otherwise involve nations competing with the United States for
limited oil supplies.

"The prospect of an oil platform 60 miles off the U.S. coast with a
Chinese flag on it ? I want to see that," Jones said.



________________________________________________
YOU MUST clip all extraneous text before replying to a message.
Send list submissions to: Marxism@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Set your options at: http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism



Other Periods  | Other mailing lists  | Search  ]