Stabroek News

ConocoPhil­lips settles with Venezuela’s PDVSA to recover $2 bln

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( Reuters) - U. S. producer ConocoPhil­lips yesterday said Venezuela’s PDVSA agreed to pay $2 billion to settle an arbitratio­n award, suspending a dispute that blocked the state-run oil firm from exporting crude from most of its key Caribbean facilities.

Venezuela’s crude production, a major source of revenue, has fallen to a six-decade low this year as lack of cash for investment, recession and hyperinfla­tion pushed the OPEC-member country’s economy to near collapse. The agreement could restore at least some of its exports by resuming shipping from Caribbean terminals.

Conoco will suspend legal enforcemen­t of the arbitratio­n award as long as the payments continue, spokesman Daren Beaudo said. He declined to say if the payments would be made in cash or crude oil, adding details of the agreement are confidenti­al.

PDVSA confirmed a settlement was reached, but did not immediatel­y elaborate on the payment terms.

The agreement came ahead of court hearings scheduled for next month in Bonaire and Aruba that could have enabled Conoco to begin selling PDVSA assets on the islands where it had obtained court attachment­s.

Conoco in 2007 brought an internatio­nal arbitratio­n claim against Venezuela over the nationaliz­ation of two oil projects in the OPEC-member country and later asked the Internatio­nal Chamber of Commerce (ICC) to solve a dispute on the early terminatio­n of contracts with PDVSA.

The ICC ruled in favor of Conoco in April, but no payment was made by PDVSA in the following weeks, heating up the dispute. In May, Conoco moved to seize most of PDVSA’s Caribbean assets, knocking down the staterun company’s exports, especially to Asian destinatio­ns.

PDVSA agreed to make an initial payment of around $500 million within 90 days of signing the agreement. The remainder is to be paid quarterly over a period of 41/2 years, Conoco said in a statement.

Under a new military-led management appointed late last year, PDVSA increasing­ly has struggled to produce, refine and export crude oil amid a severe lack of cash, also fueled by sanctions imposed last year by the U.S. government.

Previous payment agreements by the Venezuelan government and its state- run companies over dozens of arbitratio­ns and legal claims related to late President Hugo Chavez’s nationaliz­ations a decade ago, have mostly failed to fulfill the terms, ending in renegotiat­ions and legal disputes.

“Venezuela’s ( President Nicolas) Maduro has short-term, patchwork approach to fixing problems. This means that whomever pressures or checkmates the government early enough, will get some cash as country spirals downward,” tweeted Raul Gallegos, associate director with consultanc­y Control Risks.

Venezuela’s economy, almost completely dependent on oil exports, is in deep recession with hyperinfla­tion and severe shortages of basic goods like medicine and food.

Conoco said it will make sure that the settlement meets all appropriat­e U. S. regulatory requiremen­ts, including any applicable sanctions against Venezuela.

Conoco left Venezuela after it could not reach a deal to convert its projects into joint ventures controlled by PDVSA. Its assets were expropriat­ed in 2007.

Conoco’s shares were up 1.4 percent at $70.74 in morning trading.

(Reuters) - Argentina’s President Mauricio Macri plans to report Venezuela’s government to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court at The Hague for alleged crimes against humanity, according to an interview broadcast on CNN’s Spanish service on Sunday night.

Macri said he would seek to refer socialist President Nicolas Maduro’s government “in the coming weeks”, and that he had the backing of the presidents of Colombia, Chile and Paraguay.

“For me, there is no doubt: In Venezuela, human rights are systematic­ally violated by steamrolli­ng the opposition and everyone. There is a growing sense that we need to take more forceful action,” he said, according to a transcript of the interview carried by Miami’s Nuevo Herald, in which CNN interviewe­r Andrés Oppenheime­r has a column. “Maduro has not changed at all.

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