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Chávez said it very clearly in Riad: developing
countries spend upwards of a trillion dollars in
oil and gas. He proposed that the OPEC, which
was nearly dissolved before the establishment of
the Bolivarian government –which chaired and
preserved this organization over 8 years– assume
the tasks the International Monetary Fund was
created for but has never fulfilled.
The dollar is in a state of free fall,
he said. We are paid with paper notes. We can
and ought to guarantee a supply of fuel, both to
developed countries and to those struggling to
develop that need to import it. The OPEC can
grant development credits with long grace
periods and a yearly interest of only 1 percent
that poor countries can pay with the goods and
services they can produce. He mentioned the sum
of 5 billion dollars in development aid which
Venezuela loans Caribbean countries which
desperately need to import this essential
commodity.
Chávez could invoke an illustrative
example which Cuba is well aware of: with what
it costs to import a single barrel of oil at the
end of 2007, 13.52 tons of light oil could have
been purchased in 1960, including their
transportation, that is to say, nearly 50 times
the amount today. In these circumstances, a
country like the Bolivarian Republic of
Venezuela would continue to supply the United
States with oil for practically nothing. The
earth would continue to sink as its oilfields
are drained of the oil that supports them.
I can imagine what headaches these
calculations bring him and see how just and
noble are his hopes for equality and justice for
the peoples of what Martí called our America and
Bolívar, in his struggle against the Spanish
empire, described as a single nation.
At the time, a balance could still be
maintained. Neither the empire’s diabolical idea
of transforming food into fuel, nor the climate
changes science has discovered and proven, still
existed.
Fidel Casto Ruz
November 19, 2007
4:36 p.m.
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