Tuesday, November 22, 2011

The Cuban “oil crisis”

The Cuban "oil crisis"
November 22, 2011 3:09 pm by John Paul Rathbone

Chevron's oil spill off the coast of Rio de Janeiro last week will have
many repercussions. For the company – a $28m fine. For Brazil, perhaps,
a re-consideration of the development of its massive deep-sea oil
reserves. And, for Washington, a reminder of potential problems closer
to home – in fact, less than 30 miles outside US waters, namely Cuba's
looming "oil crisis".

Florida residents and environmentalists are worried about Cuba's plans
to start prospecting for oil in the Gulf of Mexico, using a rig built in
China and operated by Spain's Repsol. So too some lawmakers. Thus, in
part, new legislation proposed by Bill Nelson, Florida's senior senator,
and Robert Menendez, of New Jersey. Their new law would allow claimants
to sue foreign companies responsible for any oil spill, and without limit.

Memories of the BP oil spill are clearly at work here. Yet this law is
not so much an environmental measure. It's more of a stick with which to
beat Cuba – or rather, as the sponsors admit, to discourage companies
from drilling for oil there. It's not the first such initiative.

The real problem, of course, is not Cuba, or the fact it wants to
explore for what look like some promising oil reserves – over 5bn
barrels, according to the US Geological Survey. Rather, it is the
embargo and the fact that, because of it, should there be an oil spill,
US companies would not be allowed to step in and help with US technology.

Recent testimony by US officials suggests, however, that a number of
licenses have already been pre-emptively awarded to some US companies,
just in case. If so, that would be another sign (such as rising travel
between the US and Cuba) of the gradual thawing of relations between the
two countries – if not their governments.

Fifty years ago, the Cuban missile crisis almost brought the world to
nuclear war and froze Cuban-US relations. It would be ironic if the
Cuban "oil crisis" did the opposite today.


http://blogs.ft.com/the-world/2011/11/the-cuban-%E2%80%9Coil-crisis%E2%80%9D/#axzz1eSFHYQGv

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