UPDATE: Venezuela's Revolution and the Oil Company Inside

Parenti, Christian

In a drab industrial suburb outside Caracas lies the Guatire gasoline distribution facility, property of the state-owned oil company, Petróleos de Venezuela, Sociedad Anónima (PDVSA). The plant...

...Marco had already been organizing with a few other drivers to form trucking cooperatives...
...He was only 22...
...Neither oil minister Raúl Ramírez nor anyone else will speak publicly to the issue of the 18,000 fired employees, the delayed SEC filings and PDVSA’s sagging production...
...In the textile plant, T-shirts and uniforms are being made for PDVSA...
...All government ministries will be required to fund and organize NUDEs, but so far only PDVSA’s Nucleo Fabricio Ojeda is up and running...
...And among the fishermen and oil workers of Ciudad Ojeda or the women making shoes at the Nucleo Fabricio Ojeda, it’s the smaller things that matter most...
...We had to hire hackers to battle the escualidos—they were dueling in cyberspace,” says Nuñez, using the pejorative term (“weaklings”) for anti-Chavistas...
...We were attacked by anti-government mobs—our tires were shot out, drivers were beaten...
...But in the government’s view, Rodríguez’s harsh counterassault on the strikers succeeded in flushing out an entire class of entrenched saboteurs and counterrevolutionaries who would have been impossible to purge one by one...
...In many ways these co-ops, found throughout the economy, embody what is best and most natural about the Venezuelan experiment...
...The fight for control of La Campiña became a medieval-style pitched battle between mobs, with fists and clubs occasionally giving way to pistols...
...intelligence community...
...When I ask him about the progress of the revolution he turns the conversation back to PDVSA...
...Massive oil wealth has also left the country with an administrative culture of dependency, corruption, incompetence and bureaucratic ossification...
...A first batch of 200 pairs of boots has been ordered for PDVSA, which will give them to schoolchildren who were made homeless in recent flooding...
...It was he who first took on the old-guard petroleros...
...It is simply a better way to meet peoples’ needs...
...It’s all so new,” she says apologetically...
...We actually had to break into our own system...
...On his shoulder there’s another...
...Those workers took with them tens of thousands of years of experience—types of embedded experiential knowledge that cannot simply be purchased,” explained one former president of PDVSA...
...Bobby Inman, former head of the National Security Agency (NSA...
...Eventually the Chavistas occupied La Campiña’s office tower and set up vigilance committees to monitor the white-collar workers who stayed behind...
...The engineers, geologists and managers who traditionally ran the company constituted a class unto themselves—petroleros—the cream of the Venezuelan elite...
...The real test for the NUDEs will be to create wealth, rather than consume it...
...William Perry, former U.S...
...More attention was given to this NUDE’s physical layout than to its economic organization...
...We had no sick pay...
...Leftist community organizations responded...
...Elementary school enrollment has increased by more than a million because schools now offer free food to students...
...Created in 1975 when the entire Venezuelan petroleum industry was nationalized, PDVSA has operated as “a state within a state,” never fully controlled by any of the governments that technically owned it...
...Today PDVSA makes at least $40 billion a year in revenues and sits on the second largest hydrocarbon reserves in the world—78 billion barrels of oil with an estimated 238 billion barrels of tar oil (super-thick, asphalt-laden petroleum...
...But I’ll tell you this: if we do not get this right, we are doomed...
...The company remained a black box at best...
...Special Forces, Wayne Downing, and former coordinator of the National Security Council, Jasper Welch...
...Can’t go out...
...This is not ‘Castro-Communism,’ this is Bolivarian,” says Carmona, mocking the opposition’s favorite pejorative for Chávez’s policies...
...PDVSA’s production and investment have indeed dropped sharply—Venezuela now pumps only 2.6 million barrels a day when its real capacity should be at least 3.1 million a day...
...At Guatire, even simple things are complicated...
...Fit, tense and dressed in a dark four-button jacket, Ciavaldini, now in his late sixties, has a reputation as a pugnacious hothead...
...We want to hire revolutionaries, not just Chavistas...
...In short, Chávez is attempting to relaunch socialism as a viable economic model, a goal becoming increasingly explicit in his discourse of “building a socialism for the twenty-first century...
...The co-ops have changed our lives,” say José Carmona, another trucker who works in the same yard as Marco...
...We’re doing some things backwards, we realize...
...Then as the fleet of trucks starts pulling in, he points out that the co-ops have painted the tankers with a new slogan: “La Nueva PDVSA, es del pueblo...
...PDVSA charges that INTESA/SAIC aided the strike by stealing equipment, access codes and critical information, wrecking essential operating systems and using remote electrical means to disrupt the flow of oil...
...We have to make PDVSA function for all and in new ways...
...journalists were arrested for photographing PDVSA facilities...
...Since coming to office in 1999, Chávez has attempted to fundamentally reform Venezuela’s political culture and economy...
...Pirates...
...That is something that PDVSA will never recover from...
...I mean all of Latin America...
...During the strike, anti-government mobs had stormed PDVSA’s central offices...
...In the tale of the strike one name keeps resurfacing: INTESA...
...The “new pdvsa” may indeed “belong to the people,” as the slogan says, but its inner sanctums are still controlled by typical Latin American bureaucrats with petty agendas and Byzantine procedures—even if they are Chavistas...
...In Venezuela oil is everything, and PDVSA is the central institution of the oil economy...
...He recommended firing the strikers—all 18,000 managers, engineers and workers who had left their posts, nearly 45% of PDVSA’s personnel...
...Just as at the Guatire plant, La Campiña’s computers froze...
...he broke open the “techno-structure” where power is exercised...
...This is the traditional heart of the petroleum industry from which over one million barrels of oil flow every day...
...Today, with the initial emergency stage now over, the truckers’ co-ops have become a reality, and are in their own autonomous way transforming PDVSA...
...In the early 1990s PDVSA had privatized its fleet of gasoline distribution trucks...
...All the escualidos should go...
...The tendency is to spend the windfall, to invest in big ideas and talk of even bigger ones...
...Does he think PDVSA can recover from the firings, the strike and the ongoing sabotage...
...But to his credit, Chávez’s quasi-millenarian flourishes are often followed in the next breath with pragmatic overtures to local business owners...
...If Lake Maracaibo is the Venezuelan oil industry’s heart, its pulse seems dismally flat...
...With the worst of the crisis over, the Restructuring Committee turned to other tasks...
...Its strategic position made it the linchpin of the crippling, management-led oil strike in the winter of 2002-2003 that brought Venezuela’s economy to its knees...
...In December 2002—amid a general work stoppage called by business and union leaders, and the chaos of daily Caracas street battles between pro- and anti-Chavista supporters—the oil strike started out slowly at first, with managers and engineers leaving key offices and production facilities...
...But grand missions run the risk of hyperbole and overheating into ideological froth...
...This is not a negotiation strategy: there really are lake pirates and these guys really won’t go out in the afternoon no matter what we offer...
...the two factories are clean and brightly lit, the clinic is new and well equipped...
...None of us knew about the informatics here...
...In October, PDVSA filed its financial statements with the U.S...
...Within the committee, we are all Marxist, but we are open to radical thinkers of every sort...
...We had heard Chávez on his TV show, Aló Presidente, talking about how we should form cooperatives, get organized, redistribute the wealth,” explains Marco, standing in a gravel yard now shared by three small trucking co-ops...
...I want to see pdvsa’s production facilities so I head out to Ciudad Ojeda, a small, languid oil town dotted with empty bars and stalked by prostitutes, that looks out at Lake Maracaibo...
...Everything from valves to pressure gauges are computerized and none of it worked,” explains Castelo...
...The task of pumping and selling oil begins to seem far away...
...PDVSA will not let me visit the oil rigs and the foreign oil companies are also very edgy, as they are being threatened with huge bills for tax arrears...
...All of Venezuela is financially dependent on PDVSA: petroleum sales provide half of state income and make up 80% of all Venezuelan exports...
...Nothing worked...
...Here the revolution is pragmatic, not ideological...
...He lifts his pant leg and shows off a gunshot scar...
...To address Venezuela’s widespread poverty, his government has spent billions on new social programs: millions of people now receive free medical care, 1.3 million have learned to read and an estimated 35 to 40% of the population now shops at the price-subsidized government-owned markets...
...Ultimately, Venezuela will succeed or fail on the basis of useful, often small-scale policies and on the effective control of institutions like PDVSA—rather than on rhetoric that bathes the state with an aura of progress and dynamism...
...Luckily, PDVSA had some mothballed tanker trucks that it sold on credit to the hastily formed transport co-ops...
...Next came rebuilding the distribution network...
...The company was unable to transfer data, keep inventory, process orders, pay bills and so on...
...Choosing to just explore the lake on our own, two friends and I decide to rent a boat...
...Known by their Spanish acronym as NUDEs, these focal points of industrial training, social services and investment are supposed to become the motors of the new egalitarian, geographically decentralized, non-petroleum dependent economy that Chávez hopes to construct...
...and we try to spread the work around...
...PDVSA is the only part of the Venezuelan economy that creates any significant economic surplus...
...We fixed up the trucks and drove all night,” explains Marco...
...When the local managers were in charge they sold the jobs...
...But the oil strike was only one stage in a continuing struggle that will determine the future of PDVSA—and thus, of Venezuela...
...Just before I showed up, 120 PDVSA managers in these parts were fired for corruption and sabotage...
...Before the strike we had no social security...
...Locals here say work is slow...
...There’s no way we will be allowed to land on any of these rigs, so we weave in and out between the structures...
...In many ways Nucleo Fabricio Ojeda is a Potemkin village where the underlying numbers tell the classically Venezuelan story: grand visionary plans, great modernist enthusiasm, but organizational incompetence papered over with oil wealth...
...It’s too dangerous to go out in the afternoon...
...At the highest levels of the government, desperation soon set in: how would they get production flowing again...
...at worst, a staging ground for saboteurs...
...Agriculture is practically dead, employing a mere 3% of the workforce and accounting for only 7% of GDP...
...this one includes cooperative shoe and apparel factories, a large clinic, a school to train new cooperatives and a series of terraced hillside gardens for training in alternative agriculture...
...Before us the lake spreads out as far as the eye can see, rippling black, grey and silver under low overcast sky...
...The physical plant is impressive: all the buildings are red brick, the old loading bay has been turned into a community plaza...
...But these firings did not transform the hostile anti-government culture of the engineers and technically powerful frontline managers who actually ran PDVSA’s operations and accounts...
...Eventually some attenuated personal contacts get me into the small windowless office of a young Chavista named Daniel Nuñez Gleynzes, who works at PDVSA headquarters, La Campiña...
...Chávez is massively excited about these endogenous development centers and hundreds are planned...
...Alí Rodríguez—a former guerrilla, close ally of the president, current Foreign Minister and possible future successor to Chávez—was then head of PDVSA...
...They want jobs, loans, education and contracts for their new cooperatives...
...market, where it distributes via its subsidiary Citgo’s eight refineries and 14,000 gas stations...
...There are still many people who do nothing but collect a check...
...Secretary of Defense...
...We were only paid per trip...
...When imported gas finally started reaching Guatire, Castelo faced a new problem: all of the plant’s computers had suspiciously crashed...
...But so far this experiment can’t even cover its costs, let alone generate a surplus...
...Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for the first time in three years, after being forced to admit that it had inflated production numbers...
...Castelo grins as the meaning of his story sinks in...
...For example, the three types of fuel—diesel, gasoline and liquefied natural gas—all flow together, floating on top of each other according to their densities, down a single pipeline from the loading terminal to Guatire, where they have to be separated into different storage tanks...
...On the east side of caracas on a hilltop in the huge slum of Catia sits an old gasoline distribution plant, almost identical in its layout to the Guatire plant...
...All his friends wear serious expressions...
...Fortune 500 company called Science Applications International Corp., or SAIC...
...We stayed awake around the clock,” he says proudly...
...Rodríguez’s radical surgery went beyond battling the top management...
...Guatire is the sole gasoline and fuel distribution center for the entire Caracas region, serving at least seven million people...
...Many top Chavistas felt that accommodation with the strikers had to be reached at almost any cost...
...We had to reverse engineer complex processes...
...Where others saw catastrophe and verged on panic, the taciturn Rodríguez saw opportunity: the chance to extirpate the source of sabotage and corruption in one bold maneuver...
...The whole place—clean, new and happy—exudes success, but is it more than just the power of oil money...
...Within days, gas supplies had begun to run out, and chaos seemed imminent...
...One soldier who was riding for security with us was killed in Caricuao...
...He was one of the first truly Chavista presidents of PDVSA...
...Now we can live on eight hours a day...
...Halliburton, the oil services firm once run by Dick Cheney, still has contracts and offices here (none of their reps were available for interviews...
...A few weeks earlier two U.S...
...Back at the guatire distribution plant, the new manager, a bespectacled Naval Captain named Alejandro Castelo Rodríquez, describes how the strike played out for Chavistas on the ground: “Our first task was to take control of the plant, set up security,” explains Castelo...
...La Campiña is like the White House of PDVSA...
...It is too soon to know,” says Ciavaldini with a shrug...
...Chávez’s version of socialism is, in practice, a mixed economy...
...Much to the consternation of the Chávez government—which inherited the INTESA contracts from previous administrations—SAIC turned out to be deeply connected to the U.S...
...Recently he proclaimed: “Either capitalism, which is the road to hell, or socialism, for those who want to build the kingdom of God here on Earth...
...Now we’re changing the culture here,” explains Nuñez in a more philosophical tone...
...About the Author Christian Parenti is a correspondent for The Nation and the author of three books, the most recent being The Freedom: Shadows and Hallucination in Occupied Iraq, now available in paperback from the New Press...
...But to really transform Venezuela, to move away from oil dependency and create development alternatives, Chávez must first control PDVSA—something no previous president has managed to do...
...Now the owners of these trucking firms were on strike...
...The kingdom of God can wait...
...I don’t just mean the revolution, or Venezuela...
...Established in 1996, this technology firm was a joint venture between PDVSA and a U.S...
...This is a grand mission, nothing less than a relaunching of the socialist dream...
...When the strike came we had to move fast...
...They kill fishermen and take their engines and boats...
...One finds similar talk among the revolutionary cadre, the former community organizers who are now vice-ministers and high-level government bureaucrats...
...The whole oil industry is on edge...
...My photographer friend shoots photos as I try to soak up the vibe of the industry...
...Too many pirates,” says one young man...
...But affairs quickly turned grim as PDVSA’s fleet of tankers refused to move, headquarters staff walked off the job, and the whole system began backing up and shutting down—oil wells, refineries, tankers, terminals and finally gas stations...
...At times, Chávez encourages this with discourse that veers into messianic mumbo-jumbo...
...Vere, Nuñez and others were hired as part of the “Restructuring Committee,” a type of political commissariat tasked with purging the opposition from PDVSA...
...The mechanism to perform this routine yet essential task had been shut down during the strike...
...And from the gloom begins to emerge a veritable city of floating, industrial junk—derricks, electrical towers, derelict oil wells, half-submerged buoys the size of cars, messy service barges, here and there a giant pumping or drilling station with a few lights burning...
...In all previous governments the top petroleros held a quiet veto power over key political matters, including ministerial appointments and investment policy...
...More disturbing still was the strange behavior of electrical components at various oil facilities, where crucial remote-controlled valves and pumps in the far-flung pipeline system would open and close without warning, causing small accidents: the main pipeline in Guatire almost exploded...
...We couldn’t let them have it,” explains Vere, who worked with a coalition of Caracas community organizations during the oil strike...
...When the military arrived on the third day of the strike, all the managers and engineers had already left the plant, and only a few Chavista laborers remained camped inside to prevent sabotage...
...If we fail, it means another century of misery, violence and hunger...
...The lake around Ojeda is scattered with rusting oil derricks and other floating industrial platforms...
...That is, until the strike...
...To spread the wealth, all construction was done by local cooperatives with engineering from PDVSA and the military...
...and William B. Black, Jr., who after retiring from the NSA in 1997 became Assistant Vice President at SAIC, only to return to the NSA as Deputy Director in 2000...
...To cover for the mounting gasoline shortages, the government started burning through its hard-won foreign currency reserves and development funds to import fuel from abroad...
...Over the objections of other ministers, Chávez went with Rodríguez...
...At sunrise, we glide slowly through a thick, twisted mangrove swamp, then past the duckweed and into open water...
...Castelo turned to a trucker named Alexis Marco for help...
...Despite its unremarkable appearance, it was here at the Guatire plant that Hugo Chávez’s left-leaning Bolivarian revolution faced one of its gravest tests...
...And in rebuilding PDVSA, the Chávez government has sought to transform it into something more than an oil company—an engine of alternative development...
...Many previous governments also tried to kick start non-petroleum development with heavy injections of oil money, but most failed...
...There Nuñez and one of his older, supervising comrades, Ángel Vere, unfold the tale of their work and how they arrived at PDVSA...
...The opposition mayor of Caracas at that time, Alfredo Peña, sent his cops against the Chavistas...
...If no fuel moved in or out of this little distribution center, Caracas would have fallen into anarchy, and Hugo Chávez’s revolution would have likely been swept away...
...An invasion of non-native duckweed—little plants about the size and shape of lentils with tentacles that the locals call lemna—gets so thick at the edges of the lake that it forms an almost dry floating, bright-green mat...
...The firm’s recent board members include: John Deutsch and Robert Gates, both former Directors of the CIA...
...During the early years of his presidency, Chávez appointed a series of loyalists to run the company, and each attempted a house- cleaning, dismissing layer after layer of top executives...
...their yards locked, their trucks partially dismantled...
...Alejandra Espina, a social psychologist helping to organize this model NUDE, explains that the planners of the center don’t actually know how much the factories must sell to make ends meet...
...But one particularly strong voice dissented...
...And with oil prices well above $50 a barrel, the ongoing crisis at PDVSA, and thus at the heart of the Venezuelan revolution, can easily be overlooked...
...Yet oil has also been a curse...
...But down on a polluted and lily pad-choked slip, some young fishermen are not too eager to take us out...
...Janneth Nuñez, an adult student of Misión Rivas, a PDVSA-funded literacy program, is waiting outside a bank for her monthly stipends...
...Now the hiring is all done in Caracas,” says Nuñez approvingly...
...We read about the cooperatives in Mondragón, Spain...
...We want them out...
...The plant isn’t much to look at—a few flat buildings, a series of larger spherical tanks and four loading bays where petrol trucks fill up under an awning of pipes and valves...
...Toward the end of my trip, I meet Héctor Ciavaldini in the quiet courtyard of a hotel...
...Finally, a fisherman named Américo agrees to take us out the next day at dawn...
...Although the idea of these development centers is only a year old, the less-than-robust accounting here illustrates a disturbing oil-enabled incompetence that pervades the revolution...
...It is a sort of socialist business park, a model for future growth and the perfect symbol of PDVSA’s transformation into something more than an oil company...
...She says that PDVSA is contracting with small cooperatives to perform manual labor on the oil wells like cleaning, painting and repairs, but that there still isn’t enough work...
...Now we hire as many cooperatives as possible...
...The successful computer sabotage caused the strike to be vastly more damaging than it would have been otherwise...
...But this one was decommissioned 12 years ago and has recently been turned into the Fabricio Ojeda Endogenous Development Nucleus...
...The firings would be either a stroke of brilliance or the first step toward disaster...
...It was very stressful...
...Other board members include former commander of the U.S...
...We have time to be with our families and money to fund youth baseball teams...
...We had to work 10 and 12 hours a day just to survive...
...Land reform is underway in both the countryside and the slums...
...Its profitability has boosted the value of Venezuela’s currency, making imports cheap and exports uncompetitive, thus killing off much local industry...
...Vere has to get back to work, but before going he tries to bring the conversation back down to earth: “We are consolidating and deepening the revolution here at PDVSA and in the society at large through social projects and education...
...Now he works as a consultant on alternative regional development...
...Inside the shoe factory, crews of workers are learning their new trade...
...In the end, Chávez would break the oil strike, just as he has survived a U.S.-backed coup d’état and beaten the opposition at the ballot box on six occasions...
...It is one of the largest companies in Latin America and the fourth largest supplier of petroleum to the U.S...
...We had to read the manuals and then develop new systems of control...
...They kept this power because PDVSA was both a rich and well-run megafirm, considered a First World corporation in a Third World country—innovative, technologically savvy and aggressive...

Vol. 39 • January 2006 • No. 4


 
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