Financial Times FT.com

Lex: Bolivian energy

Published: May 2 2006 13:45 | Last updated: May 2 2006 21:03

Who loses from the latest twist in Bolivia’s relationship with foreign oil companies? Evo Morales marked the 100th day of his presidency by sending in troops to seize foreign-operated energy assets.

Details of exactly what will happen to these remain sketchy, but Repsol of Spain is an obvious potential loser. At least January’s reserves writedown had already lowered expectations. Yesterday’s 0.6 per cent fall in the share price reflects that, as well as the fact that any losses would be concentrated in low-margin, long-dated gas supply.

For BG Group, Bolivia may represent only 3-4 per cent of current production and proved reserves, but it is potentially a significant element of the UK company’s medium-term production growth prospects. That said, exactly how and when these reserves were to be developed was uncertain anyway. In fact, the shares rose yesterday, on the back of a new agreement to enter Oman.

The sheer scale of Petrobras, Total and BP minimises the impact on them. For the sector as a whole, though, this is another instance of governments taking a larger share of the pie while energy prices are high. That could actually provide a short-term boost for oil companies such as OMV and Statoil, with their focus on “safe” European operations.

The biggest loser, therefore, is Bolivia itself. Foreign capital and expertise has underpinned the seven-fold increase in the country’s gas reserves since 1997. Neither Venezuela since the 2002-03 strikes and mass dismissals, nor Iran since its 1979 revolution, have regained pre-disruption production levels. Mr Morales may have one eye on the oil price and the other on popular support. Both are short-term, volatile factors. In oil, it is better to play the long game.

- Click here to add your comments
- Get Lex by email

More Lex in this sector

US litigation

Output gaps

Utility players

Bonus windfall tax

Luxury goods

Regulators inside banks

KKR

Japan, deflating

Rare earth elements

Commodity prices

Left column content

Your comments

Discussion

Comment

Post your comments on a particular Lex note

Left column content

Lex by email

Sign up

Signup

FT.com subscribers can now receive three email packages: Lex live, Lex alerts and Best of Lex

Jobs and classifieds

Jobs

Search
Type your search criteria below:

Global Head of Aftersales

Material Handling Capital Equipment

Executive Director

Harvard Shanghai Center

Non-Executive Director

The Housing Finance Corporation

Chief Executive Officer

Financial Services Group

Recruiters

FT.com can deliver talented individuals across all industries around the world

Post a job now