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Culture > Cuba > As Cuba gets bu...
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As Cuba gets busy, Canada misses out

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 28, 2008 at 03:20 PM

As Cuba gets busy, Canada misses out
KONRAD YAKABUSKI
kyakabuski@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 28, 2008 at 7:24 AM EDT

MONTREAL — If Communist Cuba is open for business - as its seems like 
never before to be under new president Raul Castro - then Canadian 
companies should be the first through the door, right?

After all, Pierre Trudeau became the first leader of a NATO country to 
visit the communist island in 1976. Jean Chrétien paid a follow-up visit 
to Fidel Castro a decade ago, just after passing legislation to protect 
Toronto-based Cuba booster Sherritt International Corp. from any nasty 
spillover in this country from the anti-Cuba U.S. Helms-Burton Act.

With that history of Cuban-Canadian complicity, Raul Castro's stepped-up 
efforts to court foreign investment to develop the island's oil, power 
and tourism sectors should mean dividends for Los Canadienses.

Not quite. Not only are Canadian businesses not first in line as Cuba 
opens up, not many outside Sherritt appear to be in line at all.

And even if they were, they'd risk being trampled by more quick-footed 
contenders - those erstwhile Cuba-bashers, Los Yankis.

Behind the scenes, American business lobbies have been increasing 
pressure on their government to ease or lift the 47-year-old U.S. trade 
embargo. There's one reason for that: oil.

The U.S. Geological Survey estimates almost five billion barrels of oil 
and almost 10 trillion cubic feet of natural gas lie below Cuban waters 
in the Gulf of Mexico - enough to make Cuba energy independent for a
while.

So far, oil companies from Spain, Norway, Malaysia, Brazil, Vietnam and 
India have all struck deals with the regime to explore for oil in Cuban 
waters.

But exploration rights for more than half of Cuba's 59 deep-water blocks 
have yet to be awarded by Mr. Castro's government, and U.S. oil giants 
want in.

A ****fting political tide in the U.S., with the election of a new 
president in November and a waning of anti-Castro sentiment even among 
Cuban-Americans in Florida, means the U.S. oil firms just might get 
their wish. An easing of the embargo appears inevitable, according to 
Cuban-born energy consultant Jorge R. Pinon, "I think that script has 
already been written, even if we don't know for sure yet who the 
[political] actors will be."

Mr. Pinon, a former BP PLC executive and currently a professor at the 
Center for Hemispheric Policy at the University of Miami, added: "If 
Canadian businesses wait to read on the front page of the newspaper that 
the U.S. has lifted the embargo, they are going to lose op****tunities."

In fact, they are already losing out in at least one sector of the Cuban 
economy.

Under an eight-year-old exemption from the embargo, U.S. grain growers 
saw sales to Cuba soar to more than $400-million (U.S.) in 2007. Mr. 
Pinon expects them to nearly double this year.

Canada remains among Cuba's biggest trading partners, with two-way trade 
totalling about $1.6-billion (Canadian) last year. But foodstuffs 
accounted for little of Canada's $564-million in ex****ts to the island, 
which consisted largely of machinery and equipment.

As a result, U.S. ex****ts to Cuba are on track to surpass Canada's this 
year, likely the first time that has happened since the 1959 communist 
revolution that brought Fidel Castro to power.

Mr. Pinon expects whoever wins the White House in November to extend an 
olive branch to Cuba, since pressure to do so from within the U.S. 
Congress has been growing.

In particular, Montana Democratic Senator Max Baucus, whose state could 
profit from relaxed rules governing agricultural ex****ts to Cuba, has 
called Raul Castro's recent economic reforms an op****tunity to "get our 
Cuba policy right by easing trade and travel restrictions." His 
sentiments have been echoed by governors in other grain-growing states.

Canadian businesses, meanwhile, seem strangely complacent. Mr. Pinon 
said he was surprised to see so few Canadian business representatives at 
the annual meeting of the Inter-American Development Bank, held earlier 
this month in Miami, while business people from other countries were 
keen to talk to him about op****tunities in Cuba.

"Outside of Sherritt International, I haven't seen any other Canadian 
companies positioning themselves for when Cuba opens up. But there are 
many U.S. companies that I know of who are planning to get in through 
joint ventures with [companies from other countries] to avoid being seen 
as carpetbaggers in Cuba." In addition, a slew of non-U.S. consumer 
goods companies have entered Cuba in the past few years through joint 
ventures with the government, including Nestlé, InBev, Unilever, Pernod 
Ricard and British American Tobacco. But Canadian food and beverage 
makers are absent.

Junior oil producer Pebercan Inc. of Montreal and Vancouver-based 
Leisure Canada Inc., which has been trying to kick-start hotel and golf 
resorts in Cuba for years, are among the handful of Canadian firms 
currently on the ground in Cuba.

Toronto-based Sherritt remains Canada's primary flag bearer in Cuba. It 
has grown in more than a decade to become the island's biggest foreign 
investor with interests in nickel mining, oil production and power 
generation. It is also a minority partner with Spain's Sol Melia SA in 
two Cuban hotels.

Sherritt, which has been likened to Cuba's Canadian Pacific by its 
outspoken executive chairman Ian Delaney, has outlined aggressive plans 
to invest more than $1-billion in Cuba in the next few years, in part to 
increase the output the Moa nickel mine it owns in partner****p with the 
Cuban government, by almost half to 49,000 tonnes annually.

Sherritt has also set its sights on offshore oil exploration. It is 
already Cuba's biggest oil producer, pumping out more than 30,000 
barrels a day in 2007 in partner****p with state oil company Cubapetroleo 
(Cupet). The production accounts for about 15 per cent of Cuba's daily 
consumption.

Cuba currently gets most of its oil from Venezuela, whose anti-American 
president Hugo Chavez has sold the black gold to his communist ally on 
favourable terms.

But with estimates of Cuba's own offshore oil reserves pegged at more 
than five billion barrels, Mr. Castro is said to be eager to develop the 
resource and reduce Cuba's dependence on Mr. Chavez.

Sherritt, meanwhile, also reached a deal with the government in February 
to increase the capacity of its one-third-owned gas-fired power plants 
in Cuba to 526 megawatts from the current 376 MW.

Mr. Delaney developed such a close relation****p with Fidel Castrothat he 
was long a punching bag for the anti-Castro forces in U.S. politics. He 
still cannot set foot in the United States under the 1996 Helms-Burton 
Act that extended the reach of the embargo.

Fidel, 81, and Raul Castro, 76, are believed to have quarrelled over 
Cuba's political and economic future. But Sherritt spokesman Michael 
Minnes insisted Mr. Delaney - who often talked about the Toronto Blue 
Jays with baseball fanatic Fidel - is on as good terms with the new 
president as he was with the old one.

"He has a very good working relation****p with Raul and Fidel. He's met 
all the senior folks in the government there," Mr. Minnes said. "Raul 
understands the Cuban state has to evolve to meet people's needs." So 
far, the new president has shown that with a string of popular reforms 
that include lifting wage limits on state salaries that currently 
average less than $20 a month; allowing Cubans to own cellphones and 
other electronic devices; enabling retired state workers to own their 
own homes; and freeing up private farmers.

Mr. Pinon thinks it's just a taste of what Raul Castro has planned. If 
Sherritt appears ready for that, other Canadienses risk missing the boat 
to post-Fidel Cuba.

http://www.re****tonbusiness.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080428.wrcuba0428/BNStory/Business/?page=rss&id=RTGAM.20080428.wrcuba0428
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
As Cuba gets busy, Canada misses out
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-28 15:20:43 

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