Friday, April 1, 2011

Important dates in the history of Venezuelan oil

I'm currently reading The History of Venezuelan Oil by H. Michael Tarver and Julia C. Frederick (2006) and it begins with a timeline of important dates in Venezuelan history. Since our group is just beginning to research Venezuela and we have little prior knowledge of the region, I thought it would be interesting to cherry pick the Tarver/Frederick timeline for important dates in the history of oil within the country. It will be interesting to later look back at these dates and see what we can add or subtract from the list, once we have a bit more research under our belts.

  • 1914 - discovery of first oil field in Venezuela with the drilling of the Zumaque-1 oil well. The oil field was christened Mene Grande.

  • 1918 - massive oil exploitation begins

  • 1926 - oil becomes the #1 Venezuelan export (note: it would be interesting to look a history of where oil exports from Venezuela have gone over the years)

  • 1948 - first democratically elected government in power, led by Romulo Gallegos. Overthrown by military coup in the same year. The miliary regime that followed was brutally led by Coronel Marcos Perez Jimenez (note from Daniel Yergin's The Prize (1992) is that oil production advanced rapidly during the years of the military regime (pg. 510)).

  • 1958 - Perez Jimenez' dictatorship overthrown and the military has since withdrawn from Venezuelan politics and there has been relatively continuous civil democratic rule.

  • 1973 - Venezuela benefits from oil boom as Bolivars begin to peak against the dollar.

  • 1976 - The petroleum industry is nationalized

  • 1983-4 - low oil prices cause cuts in state spending to be made

  • 1989 - "Caracozo" in Caracas. 200 people are killed in rioting that protests government's austerity plans

  • 2000 - Chavez elected to 6 year term following modifications to the constitution in 1999.

  • 2002 - Chavez appoints a new board of directors to Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) in an attempt to gain more control of the industry. The industry is opposed to the change and executives strike in April, supported by the trade unions. There are clashes between the strikers and the National Guardsmen in which 10 people are killed. Chavez shuts down the media to minimize coverage of the violence. The military demands that Chavez resign, which he does on April 12, but returns two days later. The strike by the opposition calling for his resignation cripples the oil industry and leads to fuel shortages in the country.

  • 2003 - The strike ends in February with a deal brokered by the Organization of American States (OAS) and a framework is st for a referendum on Chavez' rule.

  • 2004 - There is a class over the referendum and allegedly false signatures

  • 2005 - Chavez continues to antagonize the United States as oil prices increase and the Bolivar is devalued, causing inflation (Dutch disease)

1 comment:

  1. And 2011, Chavez offers to its country a major global exposition with the $15M sponsorship of F1 rookie driver Pastor Maldonado in the Williams F1 Team.

    Caracas believes that a better integration on the global market as well as the normalization of its relations with many "western" actors of the sector would happen thanks to PDVSA's new F1 institutional advertising platform. Also, they believe that the specific fuel and oils engineered by PDVSA for the Williams F1 team would show the world that not only PDVSA has the technology, but also that their r&d platform is powerful and comparable to the "sisters"' standards, and that they are ready to expand aggressively thanks to future bids in the several Chavez-friendly neighboring countries.

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