As even the right wingnuts of the opposition and some their mouth
pieces inside Venezuela such as the Caracas Chronicles " Chronically
Clueless" and the Devils Excrement and the US government, busness
community and the NGO's and others, even the fifth columnist's inside the
Bolivarian government can attest too, more *than the Future Of Venezuela's
Bolivarian Revolution Is At Stake In The October Presidential Election of
Chavez*. The future of the  whole of Latin America, the Caribbean region (
Haiti, Cuba in particular) and socialism as of now could be in jeopardy.

Cort

http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/relief-and-reconstruction-watch/haiti-using-funds-from-petrocaribe-to-finance-reconstruction
  *Haiti Using Funds from PetroCaribe to Finance Reconstruction*
[image: 
Print]<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/relief-and-reconstruction-watch/haiti-using-funds-from-petrocaribe-to-finance-reconstruction/print#>
  Tuesday,
17 April 2012 12:17
[image: 
AddThis]<http://www.addthis.com/bookmark.php?v=120&winname=addthis&pub=unknown&source=men-120&lng=en&s=&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.cepr.net%2Findex.php%2Fblogs%2Frelief-and-reconstruction-watch%2Fhaiti-using-funds-from-petrocaribe-to-finance-reconstruction&title=Haiti%20Using%20Funds%20from%20PetroCaribe%20to%20Finance%20Reconstruction&logo=&logobg=&logocolor=&ate=AT-unknown/-/-/4f8db20a91fc4696/1/4f8caad3ad7e89d6&frommenu=1&uid=4f8caad3ad7e89d6&ct=1&tt=0&captcha_provider=recaptcha>

"The cooperation with Venezuela is the most important in Haiti right now in
terms of impact, direct impact," President Martelly told the Associated
Press in 
December<http://cnsnews.com/news/article/ap-interview-haiti-leader-says-venezuela-aid-key>.
The most important channel for this cooperation is the PetroCaribe
agreement, which most Caribbean countries are currently a part of and which
the government of René Préval joined in 2006. Through the agreement
Venezuela finances part of Haiti’s fuel import bill, allowing for a portion
to be paid up front and the remainder to be used as a loan with a long
maturity and low rates. The funds made available through PetroCaribe are,
as the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
explains<http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/cat/longres.aspx?sk=25820.0>,
“under the control of the central government”. This makes PetroCaribe
assistance drastically different from aid provided by traditional donors, which
by and large bypasses the
government<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/relief-and-reconstruction-watch/donor-aid-disbursements-increase-06-percentage-points-in-25-months>.
In fact, traditional budget support to the Haitian state was lower last
year than the year
before<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/relief-and-reconstruction-watch/slow-pace-of-reconstruction-leads-to-lower-economic-growth>the
earthquake.

Over the duration of the agreement, which began in 2008, Venezuela has
provided nearly $1.9
billion<http://www.mefhaiti.gouv.ht/downloadpdf.php?dwn=Situation%20des%20Fonds%20Petrocaribe%20au%2029%20f%E9vrier%202012.pdf>(PDF)
in petroleum products, with over $800 million being paid up front.
Following the earthquake, Venezuela cancelled some $400 million of
PetroCaribe debt, yet with large disbursements since the earthquake Haiti
still owes some $580 million. While significant resources have already been
spent, Haiti maintains a balance of $350 million in PetroCaribe funds.

The government of Haiti has predictably turned to one of its only pools of
un-restricted funds to finance reconstruction and development programs. The
IMF notes that the GOH has “committed to only use PetroCaribe resources to
finance growth-enhancing investment projects.” The spending with
PetroCaribe funds represents a significant portion of capital spending
undertaken by the central government. In the latest IMF review of Haiti’s
economy, the IMF estimates that PetroCaribe funds will account for nearly
half of domestically-financed capital spending in 2012, amounting to 4.7
percent of GDP. While foreign financed capital spending still overshadows
this (it is projected to be 14.9 percent of GDP in 2012), the PetroCaribe
funds are unique in that they are directly under the control of the
government.

The reconstruction projects financed with PetroCaribe funds have come under
scrutiny recently as allegations emerged that Martelly received some $2.5
million in kickbacks related to contracts awarded by the Haitian
government. Yet it is also true that the PetroCaribe funds represent some
of the largest infrastructure related investments in Haiti since the
earthquake. Overall, $380 million has been awarded to
firms<http://www.mefhaiti.gouv.ht/downloadpdf.php?dwn=Etat%20des%20decaissements%20Petrocaribe%20%282011-2012%29.pdf>for
infrastructure-related work (PDF) and the most recent data shows that
over 73 percent has already been spent. For comparison, the Government
Accountability Office found in November that of $412 million in
infrastructure projects approved by USAID, only 0.8 percent had been
disbursed<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/relief-and-reconstruction-watch/usaid-more-of-a-contracting-agency-than-an-operational-agency>.
It is no wonder then that Martelly told the
AP<http://cnsnews.com/news/article/ap-interview-haiti-leader-says-venezuela-aid-key>that
Venezuela aid stacked up favorably with US assistance, which often
takes more time:

"Sometimes for a simple project, it might take too long for the project to
happen," he said. "If you're asking me which one flows better, which one is
easier, I'll tell you Venezuela."

Amazingly, despite the clear benefits of the PetroCaribe agreement for
Haiti, a steady supply of oil, concessional financing, unrestricted funds,
it almost never happened.*
*

*
US, Oil Majors Tried to Block PetroCaribe

*Soon after former President Preval was inaugurated, he signaled his
intention to join the Venezuelan-led PetroCaribe alliance. Although it had
clear benefits for Haitians, the decision set off a protracted battle with
Washington, Wikileaks files revealed. As Kim Ives and Dan Coughlin write in
*The 
Nation*<http://www.thenation.com/article/161056/wikileaks-haiti-petrocaribe-files>
:

According to the leaked US Embassy cables, Washington and its allies,
including Big Oil majors like ExxonMobil and Chevron, maneuvered
aggressively behind the scenes to scuttle the PetroCaribe deal.

For the Haitian government the oil support from Venezuela was key in
providing basic needs and services to 10 million Haitians, securing a
guaranteed supply of oil at stable prices, and laying the basis for Haitian
energy independence from the United States.

Further, Haiti “would save USD 100 million per year from the delayed
payments,” noted the Embassy in a July 7, 2006, cable. Préval earmarked
these funds for hospitals, schools and emergency needs, such as disaster
relief. But the US Embassy opposed the deal.

“Post [the Embassy] will continue to pressure Preval against joining
PetroCaribe,” Ambassador Sanderson wrote in one April 19, 2006, cable.
“Ambassador will see Preval’s senior advisor Bob Manuel today. In previous
meetings, he has acknowledged our concerns and is aware that a deal with
Chavez would cause problems with us.”

It took some two years before the first shipment of PetroCaribe fuel came
to Haiti. Since then Haiti has received over 18.5 million barrels of oil,
has direct control over significant resource flows, and has invested
millions in infrastructure and social projects.  Although the PetroCaribe
funds have received attention lately due to the scandal involving
kickbacks, perhaps the more important long-term story is the positive
effect the agreement has had, allowing the government to quickly mobilize
hundreds of millions of dollars to respond to the earthquake, while
traditional donors faced delays and bypassed the government all together.

Tags: haitian 
government<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/search?areas[0]=jtags&searchword=haitian+government>|
petrocaribe<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/search?areas[0]=jtags&searchword=petrocaribe>|
reconstruction<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/search?areas[0]=jtags&searchword=reconstruction>|
venezuela<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/search?areas[0]=jtags&searchword=venezuela>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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