Page added on August 5, 2015
From the moment the diver in red nylon coveralls and blue Chuck Taylor sneakers resurfaces after replacing rusted pipeline on the bed of South America’s largest lake, it’s a race against time. Coated head to toe in dark-black oil, he clambers aboard the service boat, rips off his makeshift uniform and scrambles to hose himself down with a special compound to wash away the contaminants.
For nearly a century, the petroleum deposits beneath giant Lake Maracaibo served as a cash cow for successive Venezuelan governments. In return, especially in the years since the company’s energy industry was nationalized by former President Hugo Chavez, it has received little back but neglect.
The Maracaibo basin is where Venezuela’s enormous energy bounty, including oil reserves that dwarf even those of Saudi Arabia, smacks up against the diminished capacity of the state-owned monopoly producer, Petroleos de Venezuela SA, to manage the twin demands of increased production and environmental protection.
Today, the 13,200 square km (5,097 square mi) body of water, a graveyard for everything from abandoned pipeline and tires to dreams of Venezuelan prosperity, stands as an emblem of a richly endowed resource nation descending into disarray.
Economic Slowdown
The economy began slowing well before the oil price rout of the past year. Growth now is solidly in negative territory, inflation is running above 80% a year, the highest in the world, according to Bloomberg News consensus forecasts, and the country’s benchmark bonds trade at about 41 cents on the dollar — giving them a yield over 20% — compared with a peak price of 129 cents on the dollar back in 2006. Venezuela is more reliant than ever on petroleum revenues, which account for 95% of export earnings and nearly half of government revenues, according to the country’s foreign ministry.
Even by the standards of a country as blessed with resource wealth as Venezuela, the Maracaibo basin is a marvel. It has been producing oil for a century, ponying up nearly 43 Bbbl so far. With 19 Bbbl of proven reserves remaining — more than the total proven reserves for either Brazil or Mexico — the lake could be providing greater relief if troubled Venezuela was more receptive to outside capital and expertise beyond China and Russia, Antero Alvardo and Carlos Rossi, analysts from Gas Energy Latin America and EnergyNomics, said in separate interviews.
Lost Revenue
In 2006, three years after Chavez proclaimed the oil sector securely back under state control, 1.2 MMbpd was pumped from the Maracaibo basin. But with a large share of proceeds diverted from maintenance and reinvestment to populist social programs — gasoline is priced at just 6 cents a gallon, costing PDVSA $15 billion a year — output from the Maracaibo basin had slumped to 745,164 bpd by 2014, according to oil ministry figures. That amounts to $8 billion in foregone revenue.
At the same time, the lake has degenerated into a stew of contaminants that include sulphide, fluoride, kjeldahl nitrogen, detergents, residential chlorine and fecal coliform, according to the website of the Institute for the Control and Conservation of Lake Maracaibo, or ICLAM, a Venezuela government entity created in 1981 and charged with care of the lake.
Government Failings
“There is great governmental irresponsibility, not just from this government but from those from more than 20 to 30 years ago,” said Gustavo Carrasquel, general director of Fundacion Azul Ambientalistas, an environmental and conservation non-profit founded in 1986. “The transnationals destroyed the lake and PDVSA doesn’t have the operational capacity to control the constant oil and gas leaks.”
Officials with PDVSA and Venezuela’s oil ministry didn’t reply to e-mails or phone calls seeking comment about the contamination in Lake Maracaibo and declining production from the basin. On Monday, Brent oil, the global benchmark, closed below $50 for the first time since January.
From the deck of a PDVSA service boat, hundreds of rigs dot the horizon, some idle and others extracting their bounty at a leisurely pace. Oil saturated tree limbs float by. The water is speckled in duckweed, which can choke both the ecosystem and small motorboats.
Twenty-five thousand km of oil and gas pipeline criss-crosses the lake bottom, much of it corroded and leaky. Oil leaching from this underwater labyrinth settles on the surface, looking like vast puddles of motor oil in a driveway after a rainfall.
Leaking Gas
Whirlpools of gurgling water testify to the permeability of the natural gas lines as well, An estimated 50% of natural gas transported in Lake Maracaibo is lost due to pipeline breaks or leaks, Gas Energy’s Alvarado said in a phone interview.
Venezuela retains the ability to reverse the production slide and stop the environmental rot, said EnergyNomics President Rossi, but a depleted treasury and the outflow of engineers, technicians and other oil industry veterans are deterring efforts. Despite its vast production potential, Lake Maracaibo is also losing its pride of place, Rossi said, as PDVSA increasingly “is putting all its eggs in one basket” — the newer Orinoco heavy oil belt on the opposite side of the country.
Downward Spiral
For now, the lake’s downward spiral knows no bounds.
As the sun sets and their boat heads back to shore, the oil services workers smoke cigarettes and play poker. The stench coming off the water and the trash floating by elicits no notice. Then they suddenly tense up as a boat approaches in the distance.
At night, it turns out, the lake is controlled by gun- toting pirates who maraud at will from small boats fitted with outboard motors. They rob crews still on the water of mobile phones and cash and often strip the PDVSA vessels of valuable cables, motors and spare parts.
As the approaching vessel gets closer, allowing the crewmen to see they are not in harm’s way, the tension dissipates. The poker game resumes. This time around, at least, Lake Maracaibo poses no risk.
13 Comments on "Venezuela’s lake of endless oil a lawless mess"
buddavis on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 8:16 am
A good lesson for all those who promote putting oil and gas operations under control of the state. There is nobody to hold the state accountable for their operations. The Venezuelan government would put the owners of a company operating wells like they are UNDER the jail (even if their motives were purely political). Production is down and their field operations are falling apart.
If for no other reason than holding the people in charge accountable, Venezuela needs to privatize their industry. The increase in production would be a secondary benefit.
Plantagenet on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 11:06 am
Venezuela should be one of the richest countries in the world. Instead, its following the path of Cuba, which went from the richest country in latin america in 1959 to being neck and neck with Haiti for the poorest country today.
HARM on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 2:37 pm
Another pro-privatization propaganda piece from the neocon oil & gas cheerleaders over at “World Oil”. Most of Lake Maracaibo’s problems are not from the current government but from profit-driven actions taken by private transnational corporations and the pre-Chavez governments from decades ago:
“There is great governmental irresponsibility, not just from this government but from those from more than 20 to 30 years ago,” said Gustavo Carrasquel, general director of Fundacion Azul Ambientalistas, an environmental and conservation non-profit founded in 1986. “The transnationals destroyed the lake and PDVSA doesn’t have the operational capacity to control the constant oil and gas leaks.”
HARM on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 2:43 pm
Endemic Latin American orruption and $50/bbl oil have a lot more to do with Venzuela’s problems than a lack of privatization. Even if they privatized the air and water, the country would still be a mess.
HARM on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 2:53 pm
“…Cuba, which went from the richest country in latin america in 1959 to being neck and neck with Haiti for the poorest country today.”
Because of the U.S.-led trade embargo, which is now ending. And their economy is now thriving, thanks to the gradual phase-out of that embargo.
http://www.worldpolicy.org/sites/default/files/uploaded/image/cuba-gdp.png
HARM on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 2:58 pm
For further evidence that unfettered crony capitalism is not always the “best” system in the world, or that occasionally putting the people and environment ahead of profits is not always a disaster, see Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Norway, France, Germany, Canada, New Zealand, Japan and dozens of other largely socialist democracies.
If right-wing impulses persist even after you have all the facts, consult a physician through your government funded Obamacare or Medicare provider.
buddavis on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 3:08 pm
You are so full of shit HARM
HARM on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 3:16 pm
@buddavis,
Hey now, countering right-wing BS may be a thankless job, but someone has to do it. 🙂
buddavis on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 3:39 pm
it is not right or left wing. If you can’t see the problems with the venezualan oil industry compared to private industry, you will never get it. Close minded.
HARM on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 4:01 pm
Privately run corporations or banks can be just at dysfunctional and corrupt as publicly run ones, if not more so. If you can’t see the problems with the crony capitalism compared to democratic socialism, you will never get it. Close minded.
Apneaman on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 7:38 pm
Venezuela coming to a country near you. Sooner than you think.
The Point of No Return: Climate Change Nightmares Are Already Here
The worst predicted impacts of climate change are starting to happen — and much faster than climate scientists expected
“Historians may look to 2015 as the year when shit really started hitting the fan. Some snapshots: In just the past few months, record-setting heat waves in Pakistan and India each killed more than 1,000 people. In Washington state’s Olympic National Park, the rainforest caught fire for the first time in living memory. London reached 98 degrees Fahrenheit during the hottest July day ever recorded in the U.K.; The Guardian briefly had to pause its live blog of the heat wave because its computer servers overheated. In California, suffering from its worst drought in a millennium, a 50-acre brush fire swelled seventyfold in a matter of hours, jumping across the I-15 freeway during rush-hour traffic. Then, a few days later, the region was pounded by intense, virtually unheard-of summer rains. Puerto Rico is under its strictest water rationing in history as a monster El Niño forms in the tropical Pacific Ocean, shifting weather patterns worldwide.
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-point-of-no-return-climate-change-nightmares-are-already-here-20150805
Apneaman on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 7:46 pm
Actually, if you live in America and you want death and carnage, just go to a crowded movie theater…..or raise your voice to a cop.
Suspect dead after gunshots reported at Nashville-area movie theatre
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/police-respond-to-report-of-shooting-at-nashville-area-movie-theatre/article25848011/
America Goes Nuts
“Hate to say I told ya so, especially when it’s this grim, but as the “American Dream” is morphing into the American Nightmare, the country is entering a profound state of sheer and utter psychosis. I’ve often said that mass shootings will eventually be so common in America that they will merit no more attention than the average traffic accident or burglary. It seems that day might have already arrived: There have been 204 mass shootings — and 204 days — in 2015 so far”
http://hipcrime.blogspot.ca/2015/07/america-goes-nuts.html
Makati1 on Wed, 5th Aug 2015 9:18 pm
I’m sure the Us has a hand in this chaos somewhere. They have been trying to control Venezuela for decades.
While at home:
https://www.popularresistance.org/the-numbers-are-staggering-u-s-is-world-leader-in-child-poverty/
http://www.abc2news.com/news/crime-checker/smash-and-grab-ring-known-as-felony-lane-gang-in-dozens-of-states-including-maryland
http://massprivatei.blogspot.jp/2015/08/dhs-front-companies-want-your-kids.html
Yep! “We are Number One!” LMAO