The Borneo Post

Argentine provinces threaten oil supply cuts in dispute with Milei

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BUENOS AIRES: Argentina's main petroleum-producing provinces have threatened to cut supplies to the rest of the country over funding reductions ordered by President Javier Milei.

“Not a drop of oil will come out on Wednesday if they don't respect the provinces once and for all and take their foot off our back,” Governor Ignacio Torres of southern Chubut province told television channel C5N.

Torres and counterpar­ts from five other Patagonian provinces announced Friday that “if the Economy Ministry does not deliver its (financial) resources to Chubut, then Chubut will not deliver its oil and gas.”

The provincial leaders were angered by the austeritym­inded Milei's insistence on withholdin­g from Chubut some 13.5 billion pesos (US$15.3 million) in monthly transfers of federal tax revenues.

Economy Minister Luis Caputo argued on X, the former Twitter, that the cut was necessary to collect on unpaid debt from Chubut to the federal government – and that 10 other provinces also owe money.

In a message on X, Milei denounced the southern leaders as “fiscal degenerate­s.”

But one prominent analyst and pollster, Artemio Lopez, said Milei might have miscalcula­ted.

“This is an unpreceden­ted conflict due to its reach,” he said.

“There is a rebellion in the provinces, and a mistaken assessment by Milei about the level of conflict” the central government can engage in with various political actors.

For the president to pick a fight with a deeply unpopular Congress is one thing, Lopez said.

“But it is not the same when confrontin­g governors. Most of them got a higher percentage of the vote than he did in the last election.”

Argentina is the world's 39th largest exporter of crude oil and the 20th largest of gas. It imports refined fuels for internal consumptio­n.

Milei, who was flying Saturday to the US to attend a conservati­ve gathering to be addressed by Donald Trump, took to X – in scores of posts – to blast Torres by his nickname, denouncing “Nacho and his accomplice­s.”

He reminded them of an article in the penal code providing for jail sentences of up to two years for anyone hindering energy supplies.

A statement from the president's office denounced “the waste of the provinces that refuse to reduce unnecessar­y expenses” and referred to the provinces' opposition as “a Chavista threat.”

Hours later, Torres responded: “I hope there is a channel for dialogue.

“The problem is that you don't know who to talk to.”

The dispute arises amid growing protests over price and fee increases as the new president promotes extensive deregulati­ons and drastic fiscal adjustment.

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