From: Colombian Labor Monitor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Fri, 1 Jun 2001 10:55:57 -0500 (CDT)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: CLM: Daily News 1 June 2001

 

REUTERS

Thursday, 31 May 2001

  Foreign oil firms drill
  despite Colombia danger
  -----------------------

By Phil Stewart

BOGOTA -- Foreign oil firms will soon begin exploring seven fields in
areas with rebel presence, despite an upsurge in the violence that has
made Colombia one of the riskiest places to do business, state oil firm
Ecopetrol said on Thursday.

Ecopetrol President Alberto Calderon said multinationals including U.S.
Occidental Petroleum Corp (OXY) and Spanish energy giant Repsol
YPF are planning to enter conflict-torn northeast and central Colombia to
test-drill.

The multinationals will pay for and carry out the drilling and, under the
terms of their exploration agreements, will share any eventual production
with Ecopetrol.

But Calderon warned violence could prevent test-drilling from ever going
ahead in some of the fields, which have total potential reserves of over
3.8 billion barrels.

``If (security) is maintained at current levels, we should be able to
drill in the majority of these seven fields,'' Calderon said at a press
conference.

He added that the chance of discovering oil at each of the seven fields
stood at about 15 to 20 percent.

Ecopetrol has been waging an all-out campaign to woo foreign firms to
Colombia to tap vast, unexplored reserves and prevent one of Latin
America's top five oil producers from becoming a net importer as soon as
2004.

Calderon said Ecopetrol had signed 16 oil exploration contracts so far
this year, and 32 contracts in 2000.


 Colombia rebels bad for business

At the same time, Calderon revealed a study by IHS Energy Group showing
Colombia ranked as the second-most dangerous country in the world for oil
exploration, just behind Algeria.

A pipeline bombing campaign by Marxist-inspired rebels fighting in
Colombia's 37-year-old civil war helped trim crude exports -- the
country's biggest foreign exchange earner -- by 27 percent in the first
quarter to $842 million.

Buyers of Colombian crude -- unwilling to take a risk of non-delivery --
are paying an average discount of up to $2.50 a barrel to U.S. benchmark
West Texas Intermediate, according to recent study by a private Colombian
think-tank.

Hardest hit by rebel violence has been the Cano Limon oil pipeline,
Colombia's second largest, which has been virtually paralyzed since Feb.
17 due to rebel bomb attacks. Members of the Cuban-inspired National
Liberation Army, or ELN, briefly kidnapped about 100 workers from Cano
Limon field operator Occidental in April.

Ecopetrol receives about 50 percent of the oil pumped through Cano Limon,
Occidental receives about 35 percent and Repsol the rest.

When asked when Cano Limo would again become operational, Calderon
shrugged his shoulders.

``Ask the guerrilla. They have the dynamite,'' he said, half joking.

 Copyright 2001 Reuters

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