Venezuelan Daily Brief

Published in association with The DVA Group and The Selinger Group, the Venezuelan Daily Brief provides bi-weekly summaries of key news items affecting bulk commodities and the general business environment in Venezuela.

Tuesday, January 8, 2019

January 08, 2019


International Trade

SPECIAL REPORT: The Venezuela-China Relationship, Explained

This is the first of a four-part series, which will be published on Mondays this month, that spotlights the Venezuela-China relationship. Key points:

  • In 2001, Venezuela became the first Hispanic country to enter into a “strategic development partnership” with China, a relationship that was elevated to “comprehensive strategic partnership” in 2014, and which now totals at least 790 investment projects in Venezuelan territory. They range from infrastructure, oil, and mining to light industry and assembly.
  • China’s development projects in Venezuela have disappeared over the past 11 years, mostly devoured by corruption or by the debt default that this has incurred with the Asian giant, which froze many direct investments.
  • Loans from China to Venezuela reached at least US$ 50 billion by 2017, with some estimating the number to have been as high as US$ 60 billion. (The uncertainty regarding the figure is the result of opaque loans, split into payments of US$ 2 billion and US$ 5 billion each.)
  • As of 2016, China has stopped issuing new loans to Venezuela. Since then, Chinese representatives have sought unofficial meetings with individual members of the opposition, trying to secure guarantees that the debt, about US$ 20 billion, will eventually be paid back.
  • In 2000, there was an immigrant population of approximately 60,000 Chinese in Venezuela. Eighteen years later, President Nicolás Maduro estimates there are 500,000 Chinese citizens residing in the country.
  • Venezuela has gold reserves with a commercial value of more than US$ 200 billion. In Coltan, reserves are valued at least at US$ 100 billion, and iron is estimated at more than US$ 180 billion. China worked with Venezuela on the Venezuelan Mining Map in an area of 111,800 square kilometers (12.2% of Venezuelan territory), and currently has direct investments of over US$ 580 million. (SUPCHINA: https://supchina.com/2019/01/07/venezuela-china-explained/)

 

Oil & Energy

Venezuelan crude sales to U.S. drop to lowest in almost 30 years

Venezuelan crude exports to the United States last year fell 15% to the lowest annual average in nearly three decades, according to REFINITIV EIKON data, as fast-declining oil output and financial sanctions continued to hit sales. Crude volumes to the United States by state-run PDVSA and its joint ventures dropped to 500,013 barrels per day (bpd), a third less than five years ago and the lowest since 1989, figures from REFINITIV EIKON and the U.S. Energy Information Administration showed. A lack of investment, mismanagement and fleeing workers have driven oil production to the lowest in almost seven decades. Under a military-led board of directors, output fell to an average of 1.516 million bpd from January through November last year, a 27% fall compared with the 2.072 million bpd for all of 2017, according to numbers officially reported to OPEC. Other estimates are lower. The largest U.S. receiver of Venezuelan crude last year was PDVSA's refining unit CITGO Petroleum with 175,873 bpd, followed by Valero Energy with 166,099 bpd and CHEVRON with 83,041 bpd. (Reuters: https://uk.reuters.com/article/oil-venezuela-usa/venezuelan-crude-sales-to-us-drop-to-lowest-in-almost-30-years-idUKL1N1Z415R)

 

France's Maurel & Prom to invest US$ 400 million in Venezuela oil venture

France’s Maurel & Prom will invest US$ 400 million to acquire a 40% stake in a Venezuela oilfield joint venture called PETROREGIONAL del Lago, state oil company PDVSA President Manuel Quevedo said on Monday. Maurel & Prom said in a December statement it had agreed to pay US$ 80.5 million to buy the stake from Royal Dutch Shell and that it would invest US$ 402.5 million) in boosting output. “It will participate together with PDVSA with $400 million in investment to increase production in Lake Maracaibo,” said Quevedo in a broadcast from Venezuela’s presidential palace in the company of Maurel & Prom President Michel Hochard. “We have signed agreements to ensure the necessary investments at the start of 2019 ... to boost production to 70,000 barrels per day,” he said, without making any reference to Shell. The field in 2018 produced around 15,500 barrels per day. The Lake Maracaibo area has been plagued by frequent theft of equipment and chronic power cuts as Venezuela remains mired in deep recession, hyperinflation and chronic shortages of food and medicine. (Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-oil-quevedo/frances-maurel-prom-to-invest-400-million-in-venezuela-oil-venture-pdvsa-idUSKCN1P11VX)

 

PDVSA in oil deal with firm part-owned by Florida Republican

With brand-name drillers unwilling to jump in, Venezuela is resorting to a newly formed U.S. company for help in shoring up production from its crude reserves, the largest in the world. Venezuelan state oil firm PDVSA has signed a deal with little-known U.S. energy firm EREPLA, partly owned by a prominent Florida Republican, to help increase the socialist-run country’s plummeting crude oil output, the company said. EREPLA Services LLC, with an undisclosed stake held by Republican Harry Sargeant III and which Delaware state records show was only registered in November, said it plans to invest up to US$ 500 million to increase production at three Venezuelan oil fields in exchange for a portion of the crude produced. Sargeant and Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A., known as PDVSA have clashed in the past. Between 2006 and 2008, The new arrangement faces significant hurdles, including obtaining an exemption from Trump administration sanctions that block U.S. companies from providing financing to the government of President Nicolas Maduro or Venezuelan state firms. EREPLA will supply rigs and crews in the onshore fields for 25 years, with an option to extend for another 15 years, according to the contract. "The agreement gives U.S.-based Erepla enhanced managerial participation and an innovative payment structure designed to avoid the shortfalls that have plagued previous projects," Sargeant said in a statement Saturday. He said the agreement will “revitalize oil production” at the Tia Juana Lago and Rosa Mediano fields in the western Lake Maracaibo region and in the Ayacucho 5 bloc, in the eastern heavy-oil Orinoco Belt. The company added that the deal gives it “enhanced managerial participation” in the projects and will be responsible for procurement, a key difference from long-established joint ventures between PDVSA and oil majors, where PDVSA has full operational control. EREPLA said it would be “responsible for the entirety of the investment.” A spokesman declined to elaborate on how it would raise the funds. Sargeant, who has served as finance chairman of the Florida Republican Party and runs asphalt trading and shipping firm Global Oil Management Group, owns a stake in EREPLA, but declined to reveal the percentage. The deal is the first new partnership between PDVSA and a private company since Oil Minister Manuel Quevedo in August announced a set of “joint service agreements” with 14 little-known companies that did not appear to have experience operating oilfields and PDVSA. EREPLA said it had applied to the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, which implements sanctions, for a “Specific License affirming the agreement.” The deal has been criticized by hardline Chavez supporters, who say it cedes too much control to a foreign company. (Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-oil/venezuelas-pdvsa-in-oil-deal-with-firm-part-owned-by-florida-republican-idUSKCN1P11EM; Oil Price: https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Newcomer-To-Help-Venezuela-Reverse-Oil-Production-Drop.html; Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-01-04/venezuela-taps-obscure-driller-to-replace-big-name-oil-companies)

 

Why Venezuela is clashing with its old foe EXXON again

President Nicolas Maduro has vowed to block EXXON Mobil Corp. from exploring for oil in contested waters off neighboring Guyana. The dispute threatens the development of the world’s biggest new deep-water oil play. EXXON moved two vessels away from the disputed region after Venezuela’s navy confronted them last month. Venezuela claims everything west of the Essequibo River -- about two-thirds of what Guyana considers its territory, in some cases threatening military action. EXXON CEO Darren Woods has targeted Guyana’s oil riches in his push to arrest declining production and stagnating returns. The world’s biggest publicly traded oil company was granted an exploration permit by Guyana in 1999, and finally hit a gusher in 2015, and the discoveries have kept coming -- 10 to date, totaling 5 billion barrels, with at least a dozen exploration wells yet to be drilled. So far, the discoveries have been concentrated in the southeast part of the Stabroek block, a vast area about 100 miles (161 kilometers) from Guyana’s coast. Exxon wants to extend exploration farther east, closer to Venezuela’s border and into the disputed region. When Exxon made the initial "Liza" discovery in 2015, Maduro demanded that the drilling stop, said it threatened to "bring war to our borders” and withdrew Venezuela’s ambassador to Guyana. EXXON owns 45% of the Stabroek block, with Hess Corp. at 30% and China’s CNOOC Ltd. at 25%. Together they plan to produce at least 750,000 barrels a day by 2025, putting Guyana ahead of OPEC member Ecuador’s current production. EXXON said its ships were intercepted more than 68 miles west of its nearest discovery and had been conducting seismic work, mapping the geology under the ocean floor. EXXON said its plans to begin producing oil by 2020 and subsequent development plans are unaffected. Still, with expectations high that there’s a lot more oil to be found. Venezuela’s stance is causing worry. United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres referred the boundary case to the International Court of Justice last year. So far, Venezuela’s response has been to deny the court has jurisdiction in the matter. The U.S. government supports Guyana’s “sovereign right to develop those resources, which includes allowing ships to go about their business doing surveys and other seismic activities." (Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-01-07/why-venezuela-is-clashing-again-with-old-foe-exxon-quicktake)

 

Economy & Finance

Venezuela lets Bolivar slide but can't keep up with black market

Given Venezuela’s deep economic crisis, the fact that the government has devalued its official rate massively in the past month has barely made any headlines. Most people focus instead on the black-market exchange rate which is accessible for all and which sets most prices in the beaten-down economy. Despite the government’s efforts over the past decade to stamp out the street trading of money, the market has flourished and the struggle to have a single rate looks doomed without a series of economic reforms and policies that would correct the imbalances. The bolivar weakened 67% on Venezuela’s currency auction system, known as DICOM, over the past month. Last week, dollars were selling at 638 bolivars on the platform, which sets the official price of money for both private business and individuals, compared to about 213 bolivars at the same time in December. On Monday, as much of the country was returning to work after the holiday season, greenbacks were fetching nearly 1,100 bolivares on the street. (Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-01-07/venezuela-lets-bolivar-go-but-it-can-t-keep-up-with-black-market)

 

OP-ED: Venezuela's hyperinflation hits 80,000% per year in 2018, by Steve Hanke

Venezuela's economy has collapsed. This is the result of years of socialism, incompetence, and corruption, among other things. An important element that mirrors the economy's collapse is Venezuela's currency, the bolivar. It is not trustworthy. Venezuela's exchange rate regime provides no discipline. It only produces instability, poverty, and the world’s highest inflation rate for 2018.  Indeed, Venezuela’s annual inflation rate at the end of 2018 was 80,000%. How do we accurately measure Venezuela’s inflation? There is only one reliable way. The most important price in an economy is the exchange rate between the local currency - in this case, the bolivar - and the world’s reserve currency, the U.S. dollar. As long as there is an active black market (read: free market) for currency and the data are available, changes in the black-market exchange rate can be reliably transformed into accurate measurements of countrywide inflation rates. The economic principle of purchasing power parity (PPP) allows for this transformation. And the application of PPP to measure elevated inflation rates is rather simple. And, what criteria are used to categorize an inflation as an episode of hyperinflation? The following criteria should be met before any episode of elevated inflation be termed “hyperinflation”: An episode of hyperinflation occurs when the monthly inflation rate exceeds 50%/mo. for 30 consecutive days. In Venezuela, the monthly inflation rate exceeded 50%/mo back on November 13, 2016 and remained above 50%/mo until December 14, 2016 (32 consecutive days). On December 15, 2016, the monthly inflation rate fell below 50%/mo mark. Then, on November 3, 2017, the monthly inflation rate again exceeded 50%/mo threshold, before falling below the threshold on December 17, 2017 (for 44 consecutive days). So, Venezuela has been engulfed in a hyperinflation episode ever since November 13, 2016, with another flare up of the same episode occurring during the November-December 2017 period. Venezuela is the only country in the world that is currently experiencing the ravages of hyperinflation. Devastating as it is, 80,000% is a far cry from the International Monetary Fund’s unbelievable end-of-the-year inflation forecast for Venezuela of 2,500,000%/yr. One should never forget that one can measure episodes of hyperinflation with great precision, but no one can reliability forecast their durations or magnitudes—a fact that has failed to penetrate the walls of the IMF’s insular bureaucracy. How can Venezuela pull itself out of its economic death spiral? Venezuela must officially dump the bolivar and adopt the greenback. Official “dollarization” is a proven elixir. I Just what does the Venezuelan public think of the dollarization idea? To answer that question, a professional survey of public opinion on the topic was conducted in March 2017 by DATINCORP in Caracas. The results are encouraging: Sixty-two (62%) of the public favored dollarization. The fact of the matter is that the public has already spontaneously dollarized the economy. (FORBES: https://www.forbes.com/sites/stevehanke/2019/01/01/venezuelas-hyperinflation-hits-80000-per-year-in-2018/#31f2c1534572)

 

Politics and International Affairs

New Venezuela congress chief says Maduro will be usurper president

Venezuela's opposition-controlled congress opened its first session of the year Saturday, installing a fresh-faced leader who struck a defiant tone and vowed to take up the battle against socialist President Nicolas Maduro. Juan Guaido, 35, assumes the presidency of a National Assembly stripped of power by Maduro. Speaking to legislators, Guaido named off several opposition politicians and opponents of Maduro's government who have been jailed, driven into exile or killed. He said desperation has forced masses of citizens to flee abroad looking for work. "We are under an oppressive system," he said. "It's not just that — it is miserable." Tall and youthful, Guaido is an industrial engineer and former student leader from the same political party as Leopoldo Lopez, Venezuela's most popular opposition leader under house arrest. Guaido called Maduro a dictator whose legitimacy has run out. Venezuela is living a "dark but transitional" moment of its history, he said, adding that among its first acts congress will create a transitional body to restore constitutional order, but he offered no details. The newly elected chief of Venezuela’s opposition-run Congress said President Nicolas Maduro will be “usurping the presidency” when he swears in for a second term on Jan. 10 after winning a much criticized and broadly boycotted 2018 election. His statements add to criticism by governments around the world that have accused Maduro of undermining democracy and mismanaging the economy. But the largely powerless congress has few concrete means of stopping the inauguration or easing Maduro’s grip on power. “Maduro from January 10 will be usurping the presidency of the Republic,” said Guaido. “This National Assembly, as the only legitimate power elected by Venezuelans, assumes the representation of the people.” Roughly 20 foreign diplomats from the United States, Canada, Japan, Italy and Germany attended the assembly's inaugural session in a show of solidarity. "The National Assembly should inspire hope in the Venezuelan people for a peaceful, prosperous, and democratic future, even as the corrupt and authoritarian Maduro regime and its allies seek to deny Venezuelans that right," the State Department said in a statement. It added: "Every nation must take strong action to help the Venezuelan people reclaim their democracy." The assembly opened days before Maduro's inauguration to a second, six-year term widely condemned as illegitimate after he declared victory in the May 20 election that many foreign powers considered a sham. Venezuela's socialist party boss Diosdado Cabello said Saturday that Maduro will be sworn in on Jan. 10 before the Supreme Court, which is stacked with government loyalists. This defies the constitution that requires a president take the oath before the National Assembly. As international pressure mounts, a dozen Latin American countries and Canada on Friday urged Maduro to cede power and hand it over to congress until a valid president is elected. (NZ Herald, https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm; Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics/new-venezuela-congress-chief-says-maduro-will-be-usurper-president-idUSKCN1OZ0N8)

 

Latin American nations call for new elections in Venezuela

A group of 12 Latin American nations plus Canada urged Venezuela’s leader to hand power to the opposition-controlled National Assembly and call new elections, stepping up pressure on Nicolas Maduro days before he’s due to start a new term. The so-called Lima Group of nations views the presidential election in Venezuela last year as illegitimate and won’t recognize Maduro as leader when his new term begins Jan. 10, according to a joint statement issued Friday following a meeting of foreign ministers. The countries agreed to bar the entry of senior Venezuelan officials and reevaluate diplomatic relations with the crisis-racked country. Governments will draw up a list of individuals and companies with which banks will be barred from doing business and will freeze assets if necessary, according to the statement. They also agreed to suspend military cooperation with Maduro, including the transfer of arms. (Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-01-04/latin-american-nations-call-on-venezuela-to-hold-new-elections)

 

Mexico defends hands-off stance on Venezuela

Mexico’s new leftist government on Friday called on its peers to refrain from interfering in Venezuela’s internal affairs, declining to back a regional declaration that urged President Nicolas Maduro not to take office on Jan. 10. Mexico was the sole country in the 14-member Lima Group that opted not to sign a statement critical of Maduro, the first time Mexico has not supported a declaration by the group since it was created in 2017 to push for democratic reforms in Venezuela. Mexico was once among the most outspoken critics of Maduro. But ties with Venezuela have warmed under President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who invited Maduro to his inauguration last month. Maximiliano Reyes, Mexico’s deputy foreign minister responsible for Latin America, said following a Lima Group meeting in Peru that Mexico was concerned about the “situation regarding human rights” in Venezuela but would not comment on the legitimacy of its government. Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador defended his administration's hands-off policy on Venezuela Monday, saying it marked a return to the country's longstanding policy of non-intervention. The new policy is not without its critics. On Friday a Colombian woman approached Lopez Obrador at an airport — the president flies commercial class on regular flights — and asked him why Mexico hadn't taken a position on Venezuela. "I don't get involved in other countries' affairs," Lopez Obrador answered her. On Monday, he acknowledged that "this is an issue that generates a lot of polemics, but it should be understood that this is not an issue of political sympathies." Some have accused Lopez Obrador, a leftist, of sympathizing with Maduro, a self-declared socialist. But Lopez Obrador said it is a return to the non-intervention policy Mexico practiced from the 1960s — when it resisted U.S. pressure to condemn or isolate Cuba — until 2000, when the conservative National Action Party began a adopt a more activist, U.S.-allied stance in foreign affairs. "For me the best foreign policy is domestic policy," Lopez Obrador said. "This doesn't just apply to Venezuela's case." Lopez Obrador may be positioning Mexico to serve as a trusted mediator in any possible negotiated solution to Venezuela's crisis. Raul Benitez, a security expert and professor at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, said: "Maduro is isolated, and Mexico could be a negotiator ... because Maduro will have confidence in him," Benitez said. Lopez Obrador also hinted at dialogue, though such efforts have failed in the past in the face of the government's intransigence and violation of democratic norms. "We are for dialogue," Lopez Obrador said. "Will participate in that, let everything be done by dialogue." (South Florida Sun Sentinel: https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/sns-bc-lt--mexico-venezuela-20190107-story.html; Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics/mexico-urges-regional-bloc-not-to-meddle-in-venezuela-idUSKCN1OY1R4)

 

Antigua and Barbuda and Venezuela strengthen bilateral relations

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza visited Antigua and Barbuda on Monday, with the aim of strengthening various areas of common interest between both countries. He held a working meeting with the Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda, Gaston Browne, where both representatives ratified their desire to contribute to the well-being of the two sisterly nations and to strengthen cooperation with Petrocaribe and ALBA. For his part, Browne expressed a message of solidarity for Venezuela and President Nicolás Maduro, rejecting all kinds of interference and sanctions from foreign powers. In turn, the Prime Minister augured success to the Venezuelan President for his upcoming presidential term that begins this January 10. (Foreign Ministry of Venezuela: http://mppre.gob.ve/en/2019/01/07/antigua-and-barbuda-venezuela-bilateral-relations/)

 

Venezuela calls in UN Human Rights Commission

The office of the United Nations’ top official for human rights, former socialist Chilean President Michelle Bachelet, said Friday she has been officially invited to visit humanitarian-crisis stricken Venezuela, just as the opposition has begun announcing street protests in the days leading to the polemical second inauguration of embattled head of state Nicolas Maduro January 10th. The UN has not announced a date for Bachelet’s visit as of Friday, however. “Noticias ONU”, the UN’s web news service in Spanish, posted Friday: “The High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, has received a formal invite by the Government of Venezuela to visit the country”. Opposition figures in Venezuela, as well as family members and lawyers of political prisoners, have repeatedly asked Caracas to grant the UNHCHR access to the country amid widespread allegations of human rights abuses. Bachelet and many of her predecessors have previously been denied permission to visit the country by President Nicolas Maduro’s government. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2472554&CategoryId=10717; http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2472583&CategoryId=10717)

 

Supreme Court Judge denounces Maduro government flees to U.S.

A Venezuelan Supreme Court judge who once supported President Nicolás Maduro has fled to the United States and publicly denounced Maduro's re-election days before the inauguration. Justice Christian Zerpa left Venezuela with his wife and two daughters. Their destination in the U.S. was unclear. Zerpa met a reporter in Orlando and told the outlet, "I think the president, Nicolás Maduro, does not deserve a second chance because the election he supposedly won was not a free election, was not a competitive election." Zerpa said he did not speak out against the election results months ago out of concerns for his family's safety. Maduro's Socialist Party "gradually but steadily" co-opted the Supreme Court and "turned it into an appendage of the executive branch," according to the International Commission of Jurists. In 2016, following a landslide electoral victory by the opposition, Zerpa helped Maduro consolidate power through a court decision that diminished the powers of Congress. The Maduro regime’s Supreme Courte responded to Zerpa's decision to leave by noting he was being investigated for sexual harassment, lewd acts and psychological violence. Zerpa "fled the country, exercising his constitutional right, to avoid justice and so his crimes remain unpunished," said Supreme Court President Maikel Moreno, who said the investigation began last November. Moreno himself was arrested in connection with the homicide of a teenager in 1989 and was defrocked as an appeals court judge in 2007 for improperly releasing two murder suspects. "Under Moreno as chief justice, the court proceeded to dismiss every legal challenge to Maduro's authority that has reached the bench," the report stated. Zerpa is not the first Venezuelan justice to flee to the United States. Former Supreme Court Judge Eladio Aponte Aponte fled in 2012 after accusing the government of corruption. Maduro, then the foreign minister, called him a fugitive who "sold his soul." (NPR: https://www.npr.org/2019/01/07/682865392/venezuela-supreme-court-judge-denounces-government-flees-to-u-s; Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics/former-venezuela-supreme-court-judge-flees-to-u-s-denounces-maduro-idUSKCN1P00OU; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2472666&CategoryId=10717)

 

Publication of new Venezuela-related Designations, including the GLOBOVISION TV network

Today, the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) is issuing Venezuela-related General License 6.  General License 6 authorizes U.S. persons to engage in specified transactions related to winding down or maintaining business with GLOBOVISION Tele C.A. and GLOBOVISION Tele CA, Corp. and their subsidiaries until January 8, 2020. OFAC is issuing a new FAQ about General License 6. See ANNEX.

 

OP-ED: Why January 10 could spark another crisis in Venezuela

When Nicolás Maduro begins another six-year term on Thursday, politics in the crisis-stricken country will get even more complicated. On Jan. 4, the Lima Group announced they would only recognize the country’s National Assembly as a legitimately elected body and called for the OAS to follow suit. The group includes the governments of Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Panama, Paraguay and Peru – but not Mexico. A president that much of the region considers illegitimate could mean that Venezuelans representing the Maduro government won’t be able to enter many countries. Further, financial dealings could be thwarted, accounts in foreign soil frozen, and weapons cooperation suspended. If there is no longer a legitimate government, what happens to Venezuelan delegations at international organizations? What happens to the Venezuela’s representation at the IMF, the World Bank, the Andean Development Corporation? What will happen to Venezuela’s ambassadors? These are relevant questions. The declaration of the Lima Group underscores how invested many countries in the region are in finding a solution to the Venezuelan crisis by exerting maximum diplomatic pressure on the Maduro regime. Their statement that the National Assembly is the only elected body they recognize and the suggestion about the legitimacy of the Supreme Court in exile sets the stage for the opposition in Venezuela to start moving in the direction of an institutional transition that many countries could support. In his inauguration speech, the newly elected speaker of the national assembly, Juan Guaidó from the Popular Will party, laid out a blueprint for a political transition, including naming a transitional committee. There will be more actions taken in coming days and it is not yet clear if the National Assembly will move to appoint an outright parallel government in Venezuela. But some within the opposition see this as the goal after January 10, given the unique historical moment that could help trigger a crisis of legitimacy that could finally break chavismo and the military. “On Jan. 10, the clock starts ticking on a full-fledged accountability crisis in Venezuela,” says Luisa Palacios, the head of Emerging Markets research at Medley Global Advisors. “To believe that the Maduro government can keep itself in power amidst the legitimacy crisis he is about to face, you also must believe that he can stabilize either the economic situation, or inflation, or oil production. However, everything that could lead to stabilization is going in the opposite direction”. Ms Palacios adds: “Maduro’s capacity to distribute rents is significantly declining and the value of those rents is evaporating. Guaidó in his inaugural speech mentioned something which is also very true: Maduro cannot protect anyone anymore, because the revolution is killing his own.  The recent death of Nelson Martinez, former CEO of PDVSA in a Venezuelan prison is a very chilling example for other chavistas, as is the recent defection of a Supreme Court justice. Both were Maduro loyalists. It’s true that Maduro has lived through other governability crises and he has survived them all. In fact, since 2013 he’s had one every year, but the combination of events in 2019 will be much harder to face given the multiple challenges Maduro will be facing on all possible fronts imaginable.” She concludes: “I have always thought that regime change in Venezuela might be a two-stage process with some kind of political change within chavismo before there is a transition towards an opposition government.” (Americas Quarterly: https://www.americasquarterly.org/content/why-january-10-could-spark-another-crisis-venezuela)

 

SPECIAL REPORT: 7 Reasons for describing Venezuela as a ‘Mafia State’

There is no universally accepted definition of what constitutes a “mafia state.” Here are seven arguments as to why we think Venezuela qualifies and what the implications are of this troubled Andean nation as a regional crime hub.

1. Top level criminal penetration into state institutions. For the last three years InSight Crime has been tracking individuals we believe have links to organized crime and have held, or currently hold, senior positions in Venezuelan state institutions. We have found 123 officials that we confidently believe are involved in criminal activity. For legal reasons we will not publish the entire list, but some of the clearest cases are named in this investigation, “Drug Trafficking within the Venezuelan Regime: The Cartel of the Suns.” What is clear from our investigations is that the following institutions are staffed at the higher echelons by individuals we believe are, or have been, engaged in criminal activity: The Vice Presidency, the Ministries of Interior, Defense, Agriculture, Education, Prison Service, Foreign Trade and Investment, Electricity, the National Guard, the Armed Forces, the Bolivarian National Intelligence Service (SEBIN) and PDVSA. The penetration of so many key institutions, and the fact that they constitute the state’s main organs in the fight against organized crime, means that Venezuela cannot even contain organized crime, let alone effectively fight it. With so many state actors with interests in criminal activity, be it fuel smuggling, the black-market sale of food and medicines or the trafficking of cocaine, this factor alone suggests that Venezuela qualifies as a mafia state.

2. Evidence of kleptocracy. The state coffers have been pillaged on an industrial scale by the Bolivarian elite. With no transparency or public accounting of state budgets or expenditure, it is hard to calculate how much has been looted from the country. An investigation by a congressional committee put the number at US 70 billion. A former minister has stated that the number is closer to US$ 300 billion.

3. The devolution of state powers to irregular and illegal actors. Following the 2002 military coup that ousted Hugo Chávez from power for 48 hours, the president made key changes to the levers of power to ensure he could not be toppled in the same way again. One of the measures he adopted was to devolve state functions to irregular and even criminal elements. The security forces also lost the monopoly on carrying arms. Instead there has been a proliferation of weapons and munitions into criminal hands, either by design or through corruption. We have two articles in this investigative series dedicated to two examples of this: “The Devolution of State Power: The Colectivos,” and “The Devolution of State Power: The Pranes.” The colectivos are irregular, usually armed groups that have control over many neighborhoods, principally in Caracas. The pranes are the criminal bosses within Venezuela’s prison system. Under Prison Minister Iris Varela, the government has largely delivered control of the prison system to the pranes, with the understanding that they keep violence to a minimum and prevent disorder within the penitentiary system.

4. Exponential growth of Venezuelan organized crime. Today crime is rampant, and Venezuela is likely the kidnap capital of Latin America, although there is no hard data to support this claim. There have been a series of government policies that have directly benefited organized crime. One began in 2013, when the government began implementing what became known as its “peace zone” policy which was to engage in social investment in areas of high criminality and negotiate with local communities to reduce crime. Linked to growth of criminal gangs has been the increase in illegal economies. The biggest has long been the smuggling of subsidized fuel, the cheapest in the world to buy, into Brazil and Colombia. This is now largely in the hands of the National Guard, working with Colombian groups. But a far more widespread series of black markets was created via the system of government subsidies on foodstuffs and medicines. This black market has fed the growth of criminal actors, who profit from their trading or smuggling.

5. High levels of violence by state and non-state actors. While there are no official homicide statistics, the most realistic data on murders is provided by Venezuela’s Violence Observatory. It placed Venezuela at 89 homicides per 100,000 of population during 2017, making the nation the most dangerous in Latin America, in a region with the highest homicides rates in the world. Caracas ranks as one of the deadliest cities on the planet, with a murder rate of 130 per 100,000. Of the 26,616 homicides registered by the OVV in 2017, 5,535 occurred at the hands of the security forces, a very high proportion, amid widespread accusations of extrajudicial killings, often in the context of the Operations to Liberate the People. These are anti-crime offensives, launched by President Nicolás Maduro, aimed at bringing down rampant crime rates. 6. The Exportation of Criminality. Colombian drug trafficking organizations and warring factions have set up shop, turning Venezuela into a logistics base, safe haven and one of the principal transit nations for Colombian cocaine. Venezuela is becoming a net exporter of criminality. In the article on the cocaine pipeline from Venezuela through the Caribbean, “Dominican Republic and Venezuela: Cocaine Across the Caribbean,” we track the growing involvement of Venezuelans in a wide variety of criminal activities.

7. Widespread international accusations of criminal behavior. Another indicator of a mafia state is when enough international actors question a state’s legitimacy, not just on its democratic credentials, but for criminal activity. Not surprisingly, the United States has taken the lead in condemning the Venezuelan government. In one of the most recent declarations, Nikki Haley, the US Ambassador to the United Nations, said that ordinary Venezuelans were “the unwilling victims of a criminal narco-state.” Colombia’s president, Juan Manuel Santos has accused the Maduro administration of “using criminal gangs to be able to exercise better control over society, over the people, a macabre association of criminal gangs with security forces to control the population.” The United Nations has received reports of “hundreds of extrajudicial killings in recent years, both during protests and security operations,” the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein stated. Panama placed 54 Venezuelan government figures, including President Maduro, on a list of persons at “high risk” of engaging in money laundering or financing terrorism. The European Union placed sanctions on seven senior government officials, including Interior Minister Nestor Reverol, Supreme Court president Maikel Moreno, intelligence chief Gustavo Gonzalez Lopez and the number two of the ruling socialist party, Diosdado Cabello. They are now subject to asset freeze and travel bans. Even Switzerland, not known for its aggressive foreign policy, announced sanctions against Venezuela, stating it was “seriously concerned by the repeated violations of individual freedoms in Venezuela, where the principle of separation of powers is severely undermined and the process in view of the forthcoming elections suffers from a serious lack of legitimacy.” This article is part of a multipart investigation looking at organized crime in Venezuela. See other parts of the series here and the full report here: (InSightCrime: https://www.insightcrime.org/investigations/seven-reasons-venezuela-mafia-state/)

 

ANNEX: Publication of new Venezuela-related Designations

Today, the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) is issuing Venezuela-related General License 6.  General License 6 authorizes U.S. persons to engage in specified transactions related to winding down or maintaining business with GLOBOVISION Tele C.A. and GLOBOVISION Tele CA, Corp. and their subsidiaries until January 8, 2020. OFAC is issuing a new FAQ about General License 6. In addition, OFAC has updated its SDN list. The following individuals have been added to OFAC's SDN List: 

 

DIAZ GUILLEN, Claudia Patricia (a.k.a. DIAZ, Claudia; a.k.a. DIAZ-GUILLEN, Claudia), Cap Cana, Dominican Republic; Spain; DOB 25 Nov 1973; citizen Venezuela; Gender Female; Cedula No. 11502896 (Venezuela); Passport 030415788 (Venezuela) expires 22 Nov 2014 (individual) [VENEZUELA-EO13850].

 

GONZALEZ DELLAN, Leonardo (a.k.a. GONZALEZ, Leonardo), London, United Kingdom; DOB 11 Sep 1966; citizen Venezuela; Gender Male; Cedula No. 8639102 (Venezuela); Passport 073785390 (Venezuela) expires 01 Jul 2018; alt. Passport 046041771 (Venezuela) expires 24 May 2016; alt. Passport 002272834 (Venezuela) expires 14 Aug 2012 (individual) [VENEZUELA-EO13850].

 

GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul (a.k.a. GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul Antonio; a.k.a. GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul Antonio De La Santisima Trinidad; a.k.a. GORRIN, Raul; a.k.a. GORRIN, Raul A; a.k.a. GORRIN, Raul Antonio; a.k.a. GORRIN-BELISARIO, Raul Antonio De La Santisima), 4100 Salzedo Street, Apt. 1010, Miami, FL 33146, United States; 4100 Salzedo St., Unit 804, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States; 144 Isla Dorada Blvd., Coral Gables, FL 33143, United States; DOB 22 Nov 1968; citizen Venezuela; Gender Male; Cedula No. 8682996 (Venezuela); Passport 129603081 (Venezuela) expires 14 Oct 2020; alt. Passport 066936455 (Venezuela) expires 10 Jan 2018; alt. Passport 007931220 (Venezuela) expires 24 Jan 2013 (individual) [VENEZUELA-EO13850].

 

PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo (a.k.a. PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo A; a.k.a. PERDOMO, Gustavo; a.k.a. PERDOMO, Gustavo A; a.k.a. PERDOMO, Gustavo Adolfo; a.k.a. PERDOMO-ROSALES, Gustavo), 4100 Salzedo St., Unit 804, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States; 18555 Collins Avenue, Unit 4405, Sunny Isles, FL 33160, United States; DOB 05 Feb 1979; citizen Venezuela; Gender Male; Cedula No. 14585388 (Venezuela); Passport 083119116 (Venezuela) expires 28 Jan 2019; alt. Passport 023639834 (Venezuela) expires 13 Jun 2014 (individual) [VENEZUELA-EO13850].

 

PERDOMO ROSALES, Maria Alexandra (a.k.a. DE PERDOMO, Maria A; a.k.a. DE PERDOMO, Maria Alejandra; a.k.a. PERDOMO, Maria Alexandra; a.k.a. PERDOMO-ROSALES, Maria), 144 Isla Dorada Blvd., Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States; 4100 Salzedo Street, Apt 1010, Miami, FL 33146, United States; DOB 25 Mar 1972; citizen Venezuela; Gender Female; Cedula No. 10538067 (Venezuela); Passport 135278046 (Venezuela) expires 14 Oct 2020; alt. Passport 079280833 (Venezuela) expires 22 Oct 2018; alt. Passport 018516885 (Venezuela) expires 04 Dec 2013 (individual) [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul).

 

TARASCIO-PEREZ, Mayela Antonina (a.k.a. DE PERDOMO, Mayela T; a.k.a. DE PERDOMO, Mayela Tarascio; a.k.a. TARASCIO DE PERDOMO, Mayela A; a.k.a. TARASCIO DE PERDOMO, Mayela Antonina; a.k.a. TARASCIO, Mayela; a.k.a. TARASCIO-PEREZ, Mayela), 4100 Salzedo St., Unit 804, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States; DOB 20 Feb 1985; citizen Venezuela; Gender Female; Passport 083111668 (Venezuela) expires 28 Jan 2019; alt. Passport 023639818 (Venezuela) expires 13 Jun 2014; alt. Passport C1453352 (Venezuela) expires 02 Nov 2009 (individual) [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

VELASQUEZ FIGUEROA, Adrian Jose (a.k.a. VELASQUEZ, Adrian), Cap Cana, Dominican Republic; Spain; DOB 02 Nov 1979; citizen Venezuela; Gender Male; Cedula No. 13813453 (Venezuela); Passport 024421568 (Venezuela) expires 25 Jun 2014 (individual) [VENEZUELA-EO13850].

 

The following entities have been added to OFAC's SDN List:

 

CONSTELLO INC., Saint Kitts and Nevis [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: TARASCIO-PEREZ, Mayela Antonina; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

CONSTELLO NO. 1 CORPORATION, 4100 Salzedo Street, Unit 804, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States; DE, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: TARASCIO-PEREZ, Mayela Antonina; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

CORPOMEDIOS GV INVERSIONES, C.A., Calle Alameda Quinta Globovision Pb, Libertador, Caracas, Venezuela [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

CORPOMEDIOS LLC, 4100 Salzedo Street, Unit 804, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

GLOBOVISION TELE C.A. (a.k.a. GLOBOVISION), Caracas, Venezuela [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

GLOBOVISION TELE CA, CORP., 4100 Salzedo Street, Unit 804, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

MAGUS HOLDING II, CORP., 4100 Salzedo St., Unit 804, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States; 140 Paloma Drive, Coral Gables, FL 33143, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

MAGUS HOLDING LLC, 4100 Salzedo St., Unit 804, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

MAGUS HOLDINGS USA, CORP., 4100 Salzedo St., Unit 804, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo; Linked To: TARASCIO-PEREZ, Mayela Antonina).

 

PLANET 2 REACHING, INC., DE, United States; 7043 Fisher Dr., Unit 7043, Miami Beach, FL 33109-0064, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul).

 

POSH 8 DYNAMIC, INC., 18555 Collins Avenue, Unit 4401, Sunny Isles, FL 33160, United States; DE, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul).

 

POTRICO CORP., DE, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

RIM GROUP INVESTMENTS I CORP., 4100 Salzedo Street, Apt 1010, Miami, FL 33146, United States; 4100 Salzedo Street, Unit 608, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States; 4100 Salzedo Street, Unit 807, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Maria Alexandra).

 

RIM GROUP INVESTMENTS II CORP., 4100 Salzedo Street, Apt 1010, Miami, FL 33146, United States; 4100 Salzedo Street, Unit 813, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States; 4100 Salzedo Street, Unit 913, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Maria Alexandra).

 

RIM GROUP INVESTMENTS III CORP., 4100 Salzedo Street, Apt 1010, Miami, FL 33146, United States; 144 Isla Dorada Blvd., Coral Gables, FL 33143, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Maria Alexandra).

 

RIM GROUP INVESTMENTS, CORP., 4100 Salzedo Street, Apt 1010, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Maria Alexandra).

 

RIM GROUP PROPERTIES OF NEW YORK II CORP., 675 Third Avenue, 29th FL., New York, NY 10017, United States; 20 West 53rd Street, Unit 47A, New York, NY 10019, United States; 60 Riverside Boulevard, PH 3602, New York, NY 10069, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul).

 

RIM GROUP PROPERTIES OF NEW YORK, CORP., 4100 Salzedo St., Unit 1010, Coral Gables, FL 33146, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul).

 

SEGUROS LA VITALICIA C.A. (a.k.a. LA VITALICIA), Caracas, Venezuela; National ID No. J310205361 (Venezuela) [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul).

 

TINDAYA PROPERTIES HOLDING USA CORP., 675 Third Avenue, 29th Floor, New York, NY 10017, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

TINDAYA PROPERTIES OF NEW YORK CORP., 155 SW 25th Road, Miami, FL 33129, United States; 330 East 57th Street, Unit 12, New York, NY 10022, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

TINDAYA PROPERTIES OF NEW YORK II CORP., 675 Third Avenue, 29th Floor, New York, NY 10017, United States [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

WINDHAM COMMERCIAL GROUP INC., Panama [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: GORRIN BELISARIO, Raul; Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

 

The following aircraft has been added to OFAC's SDN List:

 

N133JA; Aircraft Model Mystere Falcon 50EX; Aircraft Manufacturer's Serial Number (MSN) 268; Aircraft Tail Number N133JA (aircraft) [VENEZUELA-EO13850] (Linked To: PERDOMO ROSALES, Gustavo Adolfo).

Thursday, January 3, 2019

January 03, 2019


Oil & Energy

Venezuela oil exports slump to a 28-year low

Venezuela, once Latin America’s largest oil exporter, ended 2018 with a whimper as overseas sales dropped to the lowest in nearly three decades. Home to the world’s biggest crude reserves, the country exported 1.245 million barrels a day last year, the lowest since 1990, as production tumbles amid an economic and humanitarian crisis. Falling exports compound the pain, as oil is the country’s main source of revenue and bankrolls the regime of president Nicolas Maduro. The country’s crude production fell by more than half in the past five years to a daily average of 1.346 million barrels this year, according to OPEC secondary source data. The country is also bracing for more sanctions, as the Trump administration is said to mull new actions against Venezuela by Jan. 10, when Maduro’s current term expires. (Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-01-02/venezuela-oil-exports-slump-to-28-year-low-on-falling-output)

 

Venezuela: A real threat to Guyana's oil boom

The day after the Guyanese government fell after a no-confidence vote Venezuela’s navy approached two Norwegian vessels conducing seismic work in Guyanese waters on December 22, forcing the ships to flee to safer waters. The ships, under contract by EXXONMOBIL, are surveying the area and working to develop massive oil discoveries that could transform Guyana. Venezuela says the activity is illegal because it is in disputed territory, but Guyana, and much of the world, views the harassment by Venezuelan ships as illegitimate. The move comes as EXXONMOBIL and its partner HESS Corp. are spending heavily to develop a string of oil discoveries off the coast of Guyana. The discoveries encompass some 5 billion barrels of oil reserves, and offshore Guyana has quickly jumped to the top of the priority list for EXXONMOBIL. As such, Guyana – a very small and poor country on the northern coast of South America – is home to one of the most active and attractive offshore plays in the world. The fact that Guyana stands at the center of one of the largest oil companies in the world illustrates the size of the prize. Over the past half-decade, EXXON has made discovery after discovery in Guyanese waters, repeatedly revising up its estimate for how much oil might lie beneath the seabed. As recently as early December, EXXON and HESS hiked their estimate for Guyana’s offshore reserves by 25% after announcing their tenth discovery. That has the Maduro regime seething. Venezuela claims ownership over some of the maritime territory in which EXXONMOBIL is working, but Guyana says that the territorial dispute was settled over a century ago. Venezuela has held outstanding claims over some territory in Guyana for quite a long time, but the disagreement was dormant for decades. EXXONMOBIL was forced to suspend exploration activities after the move by Venezuela and Guyana has referred the case to the United Nations. Despite the attempt by Venezuela’s navy to disrupt drilling operations in Guyana, the move is unlikely to have a lasting impact on EXXON’s developments in the country. Indeed, on Wednesday, EXXON said that its operations were unaffected, despite the retreat by the seismic ships a few days earlier. The episode is mostly a distraction from the larger story unfolding in Venezuela. Oil export revenues fell by a fifth in 2018 from a year earlier and are likely set to continue to decline. Harassing oil vessels in neighboring waters won’t change that dynamic. (Oil Price: https://oilprice.com/Geopolitics/South-America/Venezuela-A-Real-Threat-To-Guyanas-Oil-Boom.html)

 

Commodities

Raising cattle, a risky business for Venezuela ranchers

Rotting hides on the road are all that is left of three butchered cows. Such carnage is common in Venezuela's cattle country, where thieves, squatters and government policy threaten a vital food resource. Venezuela's severe economic crisis is felt keenly in cities — where food sources are limited — but it's also cutting a swath through what should be the country's food basket. Farmers in the cattle-rearing region of San Silvestre, in the western state of Barinas, say they are in a state of siege — from squatters, gunmen and government price controls that make their farms unprofitable. "I can't sleep on the farm anymore because I'm scared," said Jose Antonio Espinoza, owner of a 600-head herd in San Silvestre. "They have come around here and tied people up, and then stolen everything — chainsaws, water pumps, cattle." He said as many as 74 bulls have been stolen over the past year from his family farm. Cowboys on horseback herd his traditional Venezuelan Brahman and Carora breeds, as well as buffalos, to and from their fertile grazing land. But they are powerless when the rustlers strike. Meat produced in Venezuela now barely accounts for 40% of domestic consumption, less than half the 97 percent of two decades ago, according to the National Federation of Cattle Ranchers. Per capita meat consumption went from 20 kilos per year in 1999 to only seven kilos at present, the federation says. Even then, farmers can't fulfill demand. Venezuela, a country of more than 30 million people, raises less than 10 million head of cattle, the federation says; in 1999, when the population was 20 million, there were 14 million cattle. Dwindling resources makes meat more expensive in the capital Caracas, 560 kilometers (350 miles) away, where it costs the equivalent of the minimum monthly wage to buy two kilos of meat. The socialist government has expropriated five million hectares (12.4 million acres) of agricultural land, the cattle rancher federation says. Price controls mean farmers get little for the meat they produce. Land invasions are another problem. Emboldened by government policy, armed squatters invaded a large maize farm in San Silvestre and ransacked it in the space of three days. In border areas, farmers can be even more exposed, regularly becoming the target of extortion by armed groups, engaged in running contraband or drug trafficking. Late last month, the government took over the running of a score of slaughterhouses. Officials accused their owners of speculation and promptly slashed prices by two-thirds. There have also been cases of pro-Maduro state governors demanding that farmers sell part of their production, setting the prices themselves, to distribute to their supporters at low cost. (VOA: https://www.voanews.com/a/raising-cattle-a-risky-business-for-venezuela-ranchers/4724800.html)

 

Economy & Finance

Venezuelans had a brutal year. The outlook for 2019 isn’t any better, experts say.

Venezuelans said goodbye Monday to one of their worst years ever. And 2019 could be even worse, according to analysts who predict a deeper collapse of the economy and higher levels of violence and repression. Venezuela was bad enough in 2018. The economic collapse that started with Nicolás Maduro’s presidency finally exploded last year with an inflation rate of nearly 1 million percent, sharp shortages of food that have more than a third of Venezuelans eating only once a day and 5,000 citizens leaving the country daily. More than 3 million Venezuelans have already abandoned their country in an exodus described as the worst immigration crisis in the history of Latin America. The forecasts for the coming year are even worse. Estimates by the International Monetary Fund, the United Nations and other multilateral organizations point to an inflation rate of more than 10 million percent in 2019; an 18% drop in the Gross Domestic Product; a deeper collapse of the oil industry; an increase in the already high levels of violence; and the departure of another 2 million Venezuelans. Experts also predict new and tougher foreign economic sanctions on the Maduro regime starting Jan. 10, when he starts a new term in office won in elections rejected by much of the international community because of broad evidence of fraud and other illegalities. He was first elected president in 2013. One of the key concerns is Venezuela’s plummeting oil production, once the principal motor of its economy, that could drop to 500,000 by the end of 2019. That low production and the continuing drop in private economic activity could lead to the collapse of the health system, the power network and the water and other public services — areas already hard hit by the economic crisis. The economic crisis and the international pressures all but guarantee that 2019 will be a year of great turbulence. The future will depend on what proportion of the armed forces will continue supporting Maduro on his road to a Castro-styled dictatorship, or if at some point they will decide to stop supporting him. (The Miami Herald: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/venezuela/article223796500.html)

 

Maduro claims Venezuela lost US$ 20 billion in 2018 due to sanctions

President Nicolás Maduro claims US economic sanctions have caused Venezuela the loss of some US$ 20 billion: “There are multimillion losses. Our bank accounts are persecuted, our purchases of any product are persecuted worldwide: food, medicines – it is a savage persecution, what they are doing against Venezuela is criminal”, he says. Maduro says that all of this has been denounced with the UN and its Secretary General, along with several international organizations, “and no one says anything”. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/29542/maduro-venezuela-perdio-20000-millones-en-2018; AVN; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/sanciones-internacionales-le-hicieron-perder-venezuela-20-mil-millones-d%C3%B3lares-2018)

 

OP-ED: Venezuela may reach a 10 million percent inflation rate — and 10 million refugees, by

Andres Oppenheimer

After several decades of writing about Latin American affairs, I thought I couldn’t surprised by anything anymore. But when a leading international economist told me that Venezuela is likely to have a 10 million percent inflation rate in 2019, I almost choked. Alejandro Werner, director of the Western Hemisphere department of the International Monetary Fund,    says: “Yes, 10 million percent, because prices in Venezuela are doubling or tripling every month. And that, when you take it to 12 months, generates an exponential inflation rate”. He added that the Venezuelan economy collapsed by 18% in 2018, for a total contraction of 50% over the past four years. And he projected that it will fall by 5% more in 2019. If the latest IMF and World Bank projections materialize, hunger and violence will escalate even further in Venezuela, and millions more will try to flee the country. According to a Brookings Institution study released this month, 8.2 million Venezuelans — including the 3 million who have already left the country — will flee over the next two to three years. But Luis Almagro, secretary general of the 34-nation Organization of American States, told me last week that the Venezuelan exodus may be even larger than estimated in the Brookings report. That would be a much larger migration disaster than the Syrian refugee crisis that has shaken the European Union, and that contributed to the rise of right-wing anti-immigration governments and political parties across Europe. It certainly would be an unprecedented mass exodus in Latin America in recent times. Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro may be more than happy with the prospect of millions more leaving his country and being left with a mass of impoverished people who can be easily controlled with government food subsidies and receive U.S. dollars from their relative abroad. Cuba started doing that nearly six decades ago, and it has allowed Cuba’s dictatorship to remain in power ever since. But Maduro may not get away with it as easily. There is no way that Colombia, Brazil and other countries in the neighborhood will agree to absorb 8 million to 10 million Venezuelan refugees. If projections of 8.2 million to 10 million refugees materialize, Venezuela will become an international hot spot like the Middle East. (Twin Cities Pioneer Press: https://www.twincities.com/2018/12/28/andres-oppenheimer-venezuela-may-reach-a-10-million-percent-inflation-rate-and-10-million-refugees/)

 

Politics and International Affairs

Maduro's second inauguration puts U.S., other foreign critics in conundrum

During his first term as president, Venezuela’s oil production has dropped to 1947 levels, the currency has lost 99.99997% of its value, the U.S. and Europe sanctioned a growing number of top government officials, and millions of desperate residents fled the country, sparking refugee and humanitarian crises in several neighboring states. Nevertheless, on Jan. 10, Nicolas Maduro is set to be sworn in for another six years in power in Caracas. The embattled leftist’s second inauguration, the result of a May election widely considered fraudulent, presents a conundrum for the Trump administration and governments across the region, which are now trying to weigh whether the crisis is best addressed by cutting off diplomatic ties or by continuing to engage with his regime. In a Dec. 20 meeting in Bogota, the informal “Lima Group” of Maduro critics — whose key members include Argentina, Brazil, Canada and Mexico — agreed that it would no longer recognize Mr. Maduro as Venezuela’s head of state after Jan. 10, though it tabled more concrete decisions until a meeting of foreign ministers later this week. But cohesion within the group has been complicated by the electoral victory of leftist Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador. Lopez Obrador had invited Maduro to his own Dec. 1 inauguration, and his top adviser for regional affairs, Maximiliano Reyes Zuniga, insisted in Bogota that Mexico would not break off diplomatic relations with Venezuela under any circumstances. In his own end-of-year address to the nation, Mr. Maduro sounded almost chipper, saying he would press for a renewed dialogue with the political opposition and the business community and touting the government’s six-year economic plan through 2025. The Trump administration, which blasted the May election as a “sham,” has been largely mum on what might be in the cards for Maduro in his second term. Just how much he will get away with in the first year of his second term, though, depends on just how fast Venezuela continues to disintegrate. At least for the time being, Maduro still benefits from a fractured opposition, allies whose political survival depends on unity — or the appearance thereof — and an international community unsure of just what to do with him. Ultimately, his 15 percent approval rating underlines that it is force, not popular support that will propel him to his second oath of office on Jan. 10. (The Washington Times: https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2019/jan/1/nicolas-maduro-venezuela-president-defies-critics-/)

 

Pompeo, Brazil's new government target Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo discussed supporting a return to democracy in Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua with Brazil’s new government on Wednesday, in a joint effort against what he called authoritarian regimes in Latin America. Pompeo and Brazil’s Foreign Minister Ernesto Araujo considered deepening cooperation in the region at a meeting in Brasilia following Tuesday’s inauguration of President Jair Bolsonaro. They discussed “supporting the people of Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua in restoring democratic governance and their human rights,” State Department deputy spokesman Robert Palladino said. Pompeo later met with Bolsonaro, and also broached the question of “reinforcing democratic governance and human rights” in those three countries. Speaking to reporters in Brasilia, Pompeo said Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua were countries that do not share the democratic values that unite the United States and Brazil. “We have an opportunity to work alongside each other against authoritarian regimes,” he said at a news conference. In response, Venezuela’s foreign ministry said in a statement it “categorically rejected” Pompeo’s “interventionist attitude,” accusing him of seeking to rally support among Latin American countries for “forcible regime change” in Venezuela. Cuban Communist Party leader Raul Castro on Tuesday blasted the Trump administration for returning to an outdated path of confrontation with his island nation and of intervening in Latin America, in a speech marking the 60th anniversary of Cuba’s revolution. Pompeo did not address a reporter’s question on whether military intervention would be an option. (Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-brazil-venezuela/pompeo-brazils-new-government-target-cuba-venezuela-nicaragua-idUSKCN1OW0VQ; Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/usa-brazil-venezuela/u-s-s-pompeo-discusses-venezuela-with-brazils-new-right-wing-government-idUSS0N1XG014)

 

US, Colombia aim to restore Venezuela's 'democratic heritage'

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Colombian President Ivan Duque discussed Wednesday how to help restore democratic rule to crisis-wracked Venezuela and reject its "dictatorship." Pompeo followed up a trip to Brazil to meet with new far right President Jair Bolsonaro with a visit to Colombia for talks on the migrant exodus from neighboring Venezuela, and its regime led by President Nicolas Maduro. "Our conversations today covered how we can collaborate with regional and international partners to help those fleeing and help Venezuelans recover their democratic heritage," Pompeo said from the Caribbean city of Cartagena. He described Colombia as "a natural leader on regional efforts to support democracy and the rule of law in Venezuela," its neighbor. Duque said that "all the countries that share the value of democracy should unite to reject the Venezuelan dictatorship and do everything necessary to restore democracy and constitutional order." Pompeo praised Colombia for its support of the 1 million Venezuelans that have crossed the border and "fled the crisis caused by the Maduro regime's authoritarian misrule." During his visit to Brazil, Pompeo agreed with his Peruvian and Brazilian counterparts to increase the pressure on Maduro, with Venezuela's government reacting by decrying interference. (AFP: https://news.abs-cbn.com/overseas/01/03/19/us-colombia-aim-to-restore-venezuelas-democratic-heritage)

 

Greenidge meets US official on Venezuela border controversy

Guyana’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Carl Greenidge, on Tuesday in Brasília met with Senior director of the United States National Security Council’s Western Hemisphere Affairs, Mauricio Claver-Carone. The meeting, a release from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said, was held on the sidelines of the inauguration ceremony for the President-elect of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro. The discussions centered on the Guyana/Venezuela controversy, particularly the Venezuelan Navy’s recent interception of an Exxon contracted vessel conducting seismic surveys in Guyanese waters on December 22, 2018. The US State Department issued a statement following the incident, “Guyana has the sovereign right to explore and exploit resources in its Exclusive Economic Zone.” They further urged Venezuela to respect international law and the rights of its neighbors. (Stabroek News: https://www.stabroeknews.com/2019/news/guyana/01/02/greenidge-meets-us-official-on-venezuela-border-controversy/)

 

Maduro calls Guyana EXXON Oil ship incident “outrageous

President Nicolas Maduro says an incident between a Norwegian ship doing oil exploration work for US oil giant Exxon and a Venezuelan Navy warship was “outrageous”, claiming the event was part of a strategy to “weaken and divide” Venezuela. His statements come more than a week after the incident in Guyana coastal waters December 22nd, Venezuelan media was quick to note also Friday. “They want to weaken Venezuela in order to put their claws on our country and steal oil and riches from us,” Maduro told his second military parade this month. “And there’s a token to demonstrate (the incident). That was outrageous. When I was informed…I ordered Commander Remigio Ceballos and the Navy to proceed and apply all of the protocols, no matter what the cost and that’s what we did.” (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2472276&CategoryId=10717)

 

OP-ED: Is Venezuela willing to start a Caribbean war? by Scott B. MacDonald

On December 22, 2018, the Bolivarian Navy of Venezuela “intercepted” the ExxonMobil research ship, the Ramform Tethys, in the exclusive economic zone and continental shelf of the Cooperative Republic of Guyana. The ship is flagged by the government of the Bahamas and was contracted to conduct seismic work by ExxonMobil and has a crew of seventy. Relations between Guyana and Venezuela have deteriorated considerably since Nicolas Maduro came into office in 2013. This incident could be the beginning of a more sustained push by the authoritarian Maduro regime to stir up nationalism in the run-up to the beginning of a new presidential term in January 2019. Guyana and Venezuela have a longstanding border dispute, dating back to the early nineteenth century but since settled by international arbitration. Venezuela has periodically challenged that settlement, claiming about half of the country. The recent discovery of large quantities of oil off the shore of Guyana conducted by major oil companies, in particular EXXONMOBIL, has led to a new oil rush for the Caribbean country. The Guyanese government is deeply concerned that Venezuela could continue to push on the border issue. On paper, the Venezuelan military is much larger than Guyana’s. However, the terrain through which any large-scale Venezuelan incursion would proceed is challenging. Would the Venezuelan military be ready and able to make war against Guyana? The answer is probably no; the preference would be more likely to conduct bullying operations, such as the seizure of oil exploration ships. Making the situation more complicated is the involvement of the major powers in the region. Both China and Russia have been and continue to be actively engaged in keeping the Maduro regime in power, although it is questionable that Beijing or Moscow would favor backing Caracas in a shooting war with Guyana. If Venezuela were to escalate the situation from the seizure of an oil exploration vessel to a land grab or an attempted naval blockade of the offshore oil fields, the situation could turn ugly. The United States has already let it be known that it disapproved of the Venezuelan action and stands behind Guyana. How far does the Maduro regime want to take this? In December, the previous government fell and Guyana heads toward new elections in three months. Central to the election is how the projected oil money will be spent. Venezuela's action cast a dark shadow over this; something no doubt calculated in Caracas. Indeed, ExxonMobil has suspended operations. Considering the unpopularity of the Maduro regime, its need of military support and assistance from Cuban security personnel, a foreign policy distraction could be seen in Caracas as just the right thing to take people’s minds off the socioeconomic chaos and misery that their country has become under the socialist banner. Although the odds of an actual war are not likely, there is room for escalation, something that in the short term could help Maduro begin his new term. The Caribbean has long been off the U.S. radar, but China’s and Russia’s growing role in the region means that can no longer be the case. Guyana could be a test case of U.S. resolve to maintaining its strategic dominance in the Caribbean. (The National Interest: https://nationalinterest.org/feature/venezuela-willing-start-caribean-war-39987)

 

Venezuela offers help probing alleged planned attack on Colombia president

Venezuela’s government is willing to help investigate a plot to assassinate Colombian President Ivan Duque, in which three Venezuelan nationals arrested in Colombia may be suspects, foreign minister Jorge Arreaza said. The alleged assassination attempt comes amid tense relations between the two neighboring South American countries. Duque has been a strong critic of the socialist government of Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro, who he calls a “dictator,” and Maduro regularly accuses Duque of plotting to overthrow him. In a late Saturday night statement, Arreaza said Venezuela was willing to provide “the necessary police and intelligence cooperation” and had asked Colombian authorities for more information on the three Venezuelans arrested. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-colombia-duque/venezuela-offers-help-probing-alleged-planned-attack-on-colombia-president-idUSKCN1OT0GU)

 

Spiraling Venezuela crisis threatens to infect entire region, analysts say

 It first started as a trickle, but really in the last year, it became a wave of people fleeing both for reasons of persecution and simply because they could no longer sustain themselves,” Todd Chapman, the U.S Ambassador to Ecuador, told Fox News. “People don’t leave their children behind because they want to. It is because of the dire circumstances on the ground in Venezuela are causing people to take this consequential and dangerous and desperate decision to seek a better life elsewhere.” The depth of the catastrophe threatens to unravel the stability and wreak financial havoc beyond just Latin America - with little end in sight. It's quite simply "the worst crisis the region has seen in modern history," according to Moises Rendon, associate director and fellow for the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). “You have a humanitarian and economic collapse, mass immigration and the government cracking down along with institutional collapse,” he said. “Combine all these aspects together, and Venezuela is fast becoming a threat for the civility of the whole region.” Response for Venezuelans, the coordination platform for refugees and migrants, documents at least 16 countries that now need assistance in tending to the ever-burgeoning mass migration flow. Neighboring countries have subsequently been forced to deal with spikes in crimes, sex, and drug trafficking, and criminals – both from Venezuela and from home nations – seeking to take advantage of those most desperate amid the calamity. Although more than 3.3 million Venezuelans are estimated to have left the country since 2015, only a small portion has applied for asylum. “Many just can’t feed their children so their focus is on just getting a job, anything until they can go home again,” explained UNHCR’s Representative in Ecuador, María Clara Martín. “I have rarely seen a Venezuelan who says they don’t want to return.” Antonio Ledezma, a former political prisoner, mayor of Caracas and opposition leader now exiled in Spain, told Fox News more than 64% of the migrants are below 30 years of age, and more than 52% have received higher education. The impasse has torn families apart – with some migrant describing how certain members had gone to Chile or Colombia, while others ventured to Peru or Argentina – all i bid to send whatever they could home to their other loved ones, sick and starving in their homeland.  Both government and non-governmental professionals tending to the regional calamity concurred that this year there has been a “profile shift” in those fleeing. In the first few years of the meltdown, which gained momentum in 2015, those with some finances and education were able to buy plane tickets out. But as the situation has slowly deteriorated, those from poorer backgrounds started to escape.  The number of Venezuelans fleeing is expected to reach 5.3 million by the end of 2019, according to the United Nations, “in what has become the largest exodus in modern Latin American history.” (Fox News: https://www.foxnews.com/world/political-infection-how-venezuela-crisis-threatens-to-unravel-the-whole-region; BBC News: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-46524248)

 

A lonely quest for survival, the elderly left behind in Venezuela

If life in Venezuela is tough, it’s even worse for the elderly. The nation is plunging deeper into economic crisis fueled by corruption, failed socialist policies and lower oil prices, generating historic levels of hyperinflation that has left the old and infirm scrambling to find and pay for vital medicines. They face standing in hours-long lines to cash pension checks that don’t adequately cover nutrition. Many have watched as their families have left this oil-rich country, leaving them to face lonely quests for survival. Nationwide, the elderly are confronting major shortages of medicines that are indispensable for their age, even as their purchasing power has fallen around 90% in 2018. (The Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/in-sight/wp/2018/12/28/a-lonely-quest-for-survival-the-elderly-left-behind-in-venezuela/)

 

Venezuela on track to be Latin America's most violent country in 2018

Venezuela is expected to become Latin America's most violent country in 2018 after reports show the nation's homicide rate surpassed that of Honduras and El Salvador, according to an organization's report. "We will clearly become the most violent country in Latin America and the one with the most homicides worldwide," Roberto Briceno, director of the Venezuelan Observatory of Violence said in a report. This year, Venezuela has had a rate of 81.4 homicides per 100,000 people, he said. What is more worrisome, Briceno said, is that of these deaths, 7,523 correspond to people killed "resisting authority." That means that a third of the violent deaths in the country can be attributed to the country's security forces, he said. Briceno said that the Venezuelan government has not only increase repression of its population but also, starting in 2015, carried out actions that appear to indicate it has adopted a policy to exterminate criminals, rather than fight crime. There is also growing rural violence as criminal gangs take over highways and move from town to town to commit thefts. Theft on highways is so prevalent, particularly in the east of the country, that trucks go escorted, if they have cargo, and when they are not carrying cargo, they open doors to show they are empty. (UPI: https://www.upi.com/Venezuela-on-track-to-be-Latin-Americas-most-violent-country-in-2018/1701546018259/#ixzz5bYFvnRUo)

 

The following brief is a synthesis of the news as reported by a variety of media sources. As such, the views and opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of Duarte Vivas & Asociados and The Selinger Group.