Maduro
seeks sell off of Venezuela’s natural resources to escape debt – analysis, by Bram
Ebus, 1/25/18
Gold Reserve speculative shell game? To elucidate how economic speculation may be operating in Venezuela, the Brisas-Cristinas deposit in Bolívar state offers a good example.
With Venezuela’s hyperinflation
rate soaring to an estimated 2,700 percent in 2017, corruption and looting
rife, and food and medicine in short supply nationwide,
President Nicolás Maduro is desperate to find solutions to the country’s
deepening economic crisis.
Many of the president’s
solutions, including the Arco Minero and the Petro cryptocurrency, could end up
selling off Venezuela’s mineral wealth while devastating indigenous territories
and the environment, including the Venezuelan Amazon.
The Arco Minero, announced by
Maduro in 2016, would open 112,000 square kilometers,
more than 12 percent of the country, to mining. And while Maduro has invited
transnational companies to do the work, most mining that is currently being
done is controlled by corrupt elements of the military and organized armed gangs.
In December, Maduro announced the
Petro cryptocurrency, another scheme likely meant to help ease Venezuela’s
debt. The new virtual currency would either be backed by the country’s untapped
oil wealth or mineral wealth, including gold, coltan and diamonds. The fear is
that none of these policies will prevent Venezuela from becoming a failed
state.
This story is the third in a
series of Mongabay articles about Venezuela’s Arco Minero, produced in partnership with
InfoAmazonia which has launched an in-depth multimedia platform called Digging
into the Mining Arc, exclusively highlighting
Venezuela’s mining boom. The three Mongabay stories by Bram Ebus can be
found here, here and here. A fourth story, by Mongabay Editor Glenn Scherer, summarizing the
series, can be found here.
President
Nicolás Maduro, an enigmatic smile blossoming beneath his trademark mustache,
proudly displays a gold ingot to the Venezuelan press. The metal is reportedly
part of a batch dug and processed inside the Arco Minero, a vast area covering
112,000 square kilometers (43,243 square miles), south of the Orinoco River and
in the Venezuelan Amazon.
Meanwhile,
in the middle of the Arco Minero, a minerals expert who asks not to be named
out of concern for his safety, flashes an even bigger smile as he casts doubt
on the authenticity of that ingot and of the first batch of Arco Minero gold.
Maduro
“made up some propaganda with almost 1,000 kilos [2,200 pounds] of gold.
Somebody who does not know [better] will think ‘Whooo! 1,000 kilos of gold!’”
the unnamed source laughs, noting that the ingots from that purported first
shipment are of different sizes and purity, and more importantly, are
completely without certification, meaning that there is no way to guarantee
where or when the gold was mined.
“From
whom are they buying?” he asks. “Illegal mining and the mafias of illegal
mining! Here [in the Arco Minero] they are called pranes.”
This
anonymous mineral expert is not alone in his view. Many analysts dispute the
Venezuelan government’s claims about the Arco Minero.
The
so-called Mining Arc, a crescent sweeping east to west across Bolívar state,
was opened to mining in 2016 by Maduro and covers 12.2 percent
of the nation’s territory. The president views its potential wealth as his
country’s salvation from its horrific economic crisis, and even proposed in
December a new cryptocurrency partly based on the region’s hidden ores.
Government authorities have at times optimistically boasted that the region
holds 7,000 tons of gold (worth roughtly $200 billion); plus $100 billion in
coltan, a metallic ore ubiquitous in electronic devices; and 3 billion carats
in diamonds.
However,
the extent of the deposits within the Mining Arc, a wild and remote region of
inaccessible plateaus and rainforests, is truly unknown. What is certain is
that the four designated mining areas within Bolívar state are home to 198 indigenous communities, plus numerous protected ecosystems
including Canaima National Park, a
UNESCO World Heritage Site; Imataca Forest Reserve; La
Paragua and El Caura reserves; Cerro Guanay Natural Monument; and the Caroní
River watershed. All are under threat from the Arco Minero.
Ultimately,
the government hopes to attract foreign investors and transnational mining
companies to the Mining Arc, but financiers and mining firms may think twice before
risking entry into the region. Today, the Arco Minero is a violent, largely
lawless territory, where corrupt military leaders, armed gangs, large- and
small-scale illegal miners, and guerrillas all compete in a free-for-all for
mineral wealth.
Venezuela
became an oil-producing country in 1914 and over ensuing decades rapidly evolved from a poor
developing nation to a petro powerhouse, dominated by transnational oil firms
and a political elite enriched by one of the world’s largest reserves of the
black gold.
The
oil has never stopped flowing, and in recent years it reportedly made up
about 95 percent of the country’s export earnings; combined with natural
gas, it accounted for 25 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product. The
big oil earnings sound positive until one considers that much of the revenue is
used to pay off foreign debt, mainly to China. When the price of oil plummeted in 2014, the country descended into economic
ruin.
At
the moment, Venezuela´s oil sector isn’t even able to pay its own employees,
and the nation has failed to operate its oil infrastructure efficiently, with
the environment suffering mightily as a result. Consequently,
Maduro´s Mining Arc plans have raised many eyebrows among international
analysts, some of whom say the plan is largely a pipe dream — a desperate,
unsustainable extension of Venezuela’s resource
extraction-based economy.
It
is a “schizophrenic plan” that views mining as the new oil, according to Rafael
Uzcátegui, the general coordinator of Provea, a Venezuelan human rights NGO. He
describes Venezuela as a rentier state – a nation deriving the lion’s share of
its national revenues from the sale of indigenous natural resources to
transnational corporations and other countries.
Uzcátegui
says the government has in the past considered abandoning the rentier model
because of Venezuela’s negative economic experiences with its overdependence on
oil. However, both of its most recent socialist presidents, Hugo Chávez, who
ruled from 1999 to 2013, and Nicolás Maduro have hyped plans to base
Venezuela’s hyperinflation-ridden economy (likely exceeding 2,700 percent for
2017) on the nation’s finite resources, seriously deepening reliance on the
rentier model.
Complicating
matters, the relationship between Venezuela and the transnational extraction
industry has been a troubled one. Many foreign corporations, including
ExxonMobil and Cargill, saw their Venezuelan properties expropriated under
Chávez, who openly dreamed of a strong state-led extractives sector.
Today,
Maduro claims that “150 companies from 35” nations are very interested in
investing in the Arco Minero and Venezuela’s mining bonanza. However, few firms
have followed through on this interest, possibly out of fear of future
nationalization, and almost certainly due to the ongoing political instability
in the country.
Some
experts say that by boasting about Venezuela’s mineral wealth and the interest
of foreign mining companies, Maduro is engaging in a macroeconomic bluff.
“Venezuela has never been a big producer of gold,” says Alexander Luzardo, a
former senator with a doctorate in political and environmental law, who helped
draft environmental standards included in Venezuela’s 1999 constitution, when
Chávez rose to power.
“There
is no big gold reserve!” Luzardo says, then laughs: “The elites of the country
love to say this,” but it is false.
Likewise,
geologist Noel Mariño, an expert on coltan, doubts whether Venezuela possesses
the vast mineral deposits that its government claims. Nobody can be sure, he
asserts, “until pertinent geological evaluations that involve a series of
disciplines including geology, geochemistry, geophysics and more, are carried
out.”
Luzardo
and Mariño suspect that hoped-for international economic speculation is the
reason behind the vastly inflated claims of mineral wealth made by the
Venezuelan government, state company Minerven, and by some foreign companies,
including Empresa Mixta Minera Ecosocialista Parguaza (a joint
venture) and the Congolese Afridiam. A company’s value increases if it
possesses the legal paperwork for a supposedly valuable mining concession, and
then offers that concession for sale. Also, if international markets believe
there is a lot of gold and other valuable ores in Venezuela, then the nation’s
terrible credit rating could improve, allowing it to receive more big loans.
An
interactive map zoomed in on the the Brisas-Cristinas deposit claimed by Gold
Reserve Inc.in Bolívar state. Zoom out to see the complete Mining Arc. Map by
InfoAmazonia“There
is a problem of the selling and reselling of mining concessions on the
international stock exchanges,” Luzardo says. “That’s a big business.”
Brisas-Cristinas
is purported to be one of the largest undeveloped gold and copper deposits in
the world and one of the most important mineral reserves in Venezuela. Gold Reserve Inc.,
a Canada-based company, originally acquired the concession in 1992 and claims
to have invested $300 million in the site’s development, only to have its
original authorization revoked by the Venezuelan government under Chávez in
2009.
Gold
Reserve sought compensation for the loss through the World Bank’s International
Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID). The ICSID ruled that
Venezuela violated the Canada-Venezuela bilateral investment treaty and ordered
Venezuela to pay a $1.03 billion settlement. After all this investment and
litigation, Gold Reserve still hadn’t mined a single gram of gold in Venezuela.
In
December 2016, Gold Reserve Inc. stated on its website that it had modified the
settlement agreement with Venezuela, loosening payment terms and restructuring
its claim. It appears the transnational firm will continue to operate the
Brisas-Cristinas deposit in the Arco Minero through a 45 percent stake in a
joint venture, named Siembra Minera, with the state-owned Venezuela Mining
Corporation (CVM). Gold Reserve’s stake is held through a subsidiary, GR
Mining, based in the tax haven
of Barbados. The
recent Paradise Papers revelations — a massive cache of
secret financial documents released last year exposing offshore tax havens —
show the new company was created on April 15, 2016, and that two of its directors are Alexander D. Belanger and
Robert A. McGuineness, who are also officers of Gold Reserve, Inc.
James
H. Coleman, the Gold Reserve chairman, lauded the joint venture on the firm’s
website, saying “This is an important event not only for Gold Reserve, but for
Venezuela as it confirms to the mining and investment communities that you can
do business in Venezuela and that it is indeed open for international
business.”
Siembra
Minera claims to own an estimated 20 million
ounces of unmined gold,
which if true would certainly attract international investors. But, as with
other claims in the Arco Minero, Siembra Minera’s claim cannot be substantiated
because the numbers haven’t been formally verified or certified.
The
setup has raised questions over whether Venezuela entered into the joint
venture under pressure from Gold Reserve via the international arbitration
court ruling. When Siembra Minera was formed, Gold Reserve saw its stock price nearly double on the Toronto
Stock Exchange. The
firm’s website trumpeted the terms of the new arrangement, possibly to assure
wary potential investors: “Venezuela will indemnify Gold Reserve and affiliates
against any future legal actions associated with the Brisas-Cristinas project.”
Venezuela
is currently paying off the $1.03 billion settlement in
installments. In total, including interest, the country now owes a
staggering $150 billion to its many creditors.
Juan
Carlos Sánchez, an expert with the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, which won the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize, says this deal shows an absolute
loss of control by the state of its own finances: “In this case, the government
did not [use its] strength to defend the sovereignty of the country.”
As
creditors line up to demand billions from an already economically shattered
Venezuela, it remains uncertain whether Gold Reserve will ever be able to
exploit the Brisas-Cristinas deposit. Currently, the mines in the region are
overrun by armed gangs, pranes and sindicatos, possibly numbering some 30,000 or more
illegal miners. These miners are fast transforming the
Gold Reserve site into
an environmentally devastated moonscape covered in mercury-tainted ore piles
and waste lagoons.
Neither
Venezuela’s oil nor its minerals have yet been able to pull the nation out of
its precipitous economic tailspin. Making matters worse are economic sanctions
imposed largely by the U.S. against some members of the nation’s political
elite for alleged corruption and drug trafficking — financial limitations that
are also causing problems for international investors.
In December, President Maduro proposed a new
solution, unveiling the “Petro,” a supposedly revolutionary kind of
cryptocurrency backed by the nation’s natural resources: oil, gas and precious
metals. “The 21st century has arrived!” the president declared at a press
conference. “Venezuela [has] positioned itself at the
vanguard of the world. The first country that created a cryptocoin that is
based on its country’s natural richness.”
The
new virtual currency is meant to enable Venezuela to “advance in issues of
monetary sovereignty, to make financial transactions and overcome the financial
blockade,” Maduro said.
However,
some see the Petro as just another rentier scheme, especially because Maduro
offered no details as to how the new cryptocurrency might work, who will have
access to trading it, and on what platforms. Opposition National Assembly
lawmaker Angel Alvarado said the Petro “had no credibility,” and was nothing
more than “Maduro being a clown.”
Economists
speculate Maduro is looking to use the Petro to pay off some of Venezuela’s
debt to foreign creditors. Environmentalists remain wary, saying the Petro
could put Venezuela’s ecosystems and biodiversity on the line, as conserved
forests and indigenous territories are exploited to rescue the freefalling
economy.
Parliament,
which Maduro last year sought to strip of its power, has declared the Petro illegal, saying
the government is unjustly seeking to “mortgage” the country’s oil reserves.
Over the coming weeks, 100 million Petros (backed by an equal amount of as yet
unexploited barrels of oil) are expected to flow into world markets. However,
much remains unclear about the soon-to-be-released cryptocoin. At first, for
example, Maduro claimed the Petro would be backed by the nation’s gold, coltan
and diamond reserves; but in recent communiqués the Venezuelan leader only
speaks of oil.
Economic
experts tell Mongabay they are perplexed by what is happening. “The promise by
the [Maduro administration] to back the value of the Petro with commodity
reserves is not really believable,” says Asrúbal Oliveros, an economist and
director at the Venezuelan think tank Ecoanalítica. For the scheme to work, the
government “would be obligated to exploit additional commodities to the ones
they [already] export, with the objective to pay [for] the ones that they
decide to convert into Petros.”
Both
the Arco Minero and the Petro, these analysts say, are not only a step backward
and a re-embrace of the rentier state, but strategies based on haste and
speculation that will likely do little to combat Venezuela’s current economic
upheaval. That’s because the national currency, the bolívar, continues to
suffer hyperinflation despite Venezuela having the world’s biggest oil
reserves. Most experts don’t think the Petro will make much difference.
Ultimately,
these failed and failing economic policies matter most because they don’t
address Venezuela’s real problems or change anything on the ground. Venezuela
started 2018 with countrywide looting and food and medicine shortages.
Armed
roadblocks proliferate, while a corrupt military and gangs with guns continue
to pillage the Arco Minero’s natural resources, its indigenous reserves and
conserved areas. The possibility of Venezuela falling into total chaos
and becoming a failed state is increasingly real.
Luzardo,
the former senator, says that Maduro’s impractical schemes, including the Arco
Minero and the Petro, indicate a “rushed search for financial income at the
costs of the liquidation of [natural] resources, with consequences such as
deforestation, soil destruction and mercury and cyanide contamination.”
The Venezuelan government did not
respond to requests for comments on the articles presented in this Mongabay
series.
This Mongabay series was produced in cooperation with a joint reporting project between
InfoAmazonia and Correo del Caroni, made possible by a grant from the Pulitzer
Center on Crisis Reporting. An InfoAmazonia multimedia platform called Digging into
the Mining Arc features in-depth stories on the topic.
Article
published by Glenn
Scherer
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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