INTER PRESS SERVICE - NEWS AGENCY [04/03/13]
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The Cienfuegos refinery was revived in 2007. Credit: Jorge Luis Baños/IPS 
[SOURCE: www.ipsnews.ne]  | 
- Cuba  continues to focus heavily on oil for its energy needs, through  agreements with partners like Venezuela, with the hope of discovering  commercially exploitable wells in the Gulf of Mexico.
But it is also starting to take steps to diversify energy sources, as part of the ongoing economic reform process.
Investments in the Camilo Cienfuegos refinery will upgrade the waste  treatment plant and create automated systems in the truck loading yard  in order to cut losses in handling, the plant’s director, Humberto  Padrón, told IPS. He also said the refinery would be expanded, to double  its processing capacity.
The old Soviet-built refinery, located on the bay in the city of  Cienfuegos, 230 km southeast of Havana, was revived in 2007, after years  of neglect. It forms part of a petrochemical complex located in one of  the special development zones given a boost by the government of Raúl  Castro as part of an attempt to bolster the lagging economy.
The reactivation of the refinery, made possible by an agreement  between the Cubapetróleo (Cupet) and Petróleos de Venezuela SA (PDVSA)  state-run companies, cost some 180 million dollars.
The plant is currently operated by the Cuban-Venezuelan consortium  Cuvenpetrol, and only processes crude purchased from Venezuela, with a  daily output of 65,000 barrels.
Camilo Cienfuegos is the biggest of the three refineries in Cuba. The  other two are located in Havana and in Santiago de Cuba, 850 km  southeast of the capital.
The plan is to initially increase production to 85,000 barrels per  day prior to the construction of additional installations, and to  150,000 barrels per day after the expansion is completed, Padrón said.
Engineers from China and Italy are now designing the expansion plan,  which will be presented to foreign investors in search of financing,  Ricardo Caballero, executive president of Cuvenpetrol, told foreign  correspondents in early February.
In 2011, the then vice president of China, Xi Jinping, who is set to  become president this month, reached a preliminary accord during an  official visit to Cuba to finance the expansion of the refinery and the  construction of a liquefied natural gas plant.
But Caballero clarified that no agreement had yet been reached with  any potential partner for financing the expansion project. The  government hopes to find investors within the next six months.
Some five billion dollars in investment is needed for the  construction project, which will provide work for engineers and  construction workers for four years.
The expansion will double the refinery’s payroll from the current 868 people, which includes 118 women.
Additional petrochemical works are also planned at Cienfuegos.  Cuvenpetrol is seeking financing for the liquefied natural gas plant,  while Cuvenpeq SA, another Cuban-Venezuelan consortium, hopes to build  an ammonia-urea plant.
Caballero said the expansion of the refinery may make it capable of  processing other kinds of crude, besides Venezuelan, such as deep-sea  reserves found in 2012 in the first prospecting in Cuban waters in the  Gulf of Mexico, which so far have proven to be economically  unrecoverable.
In January 2012, the Scarabeo 9 drilling rig was brought to Cuba from  Asia to sink an exploratory well into the seabed in the Gulf of Mexico.  Cuba estimates that there could be up to 20 billion barrels of oil  reserves in a 112,000-square kilometre area, although the United States  projects a total of about five billion barrels.
But in November, Cuba’s Ministry of Basic Industry announced that the  rig would be removed from Cuba, after three failed attempts to find a  commercially viable well, financed by PDVSA, Spain’s Repsol, PC Gulf – a  subsidiary of Malaysia’s Petronas – and Gazpromneft of Russia.
After this harsh blow, Cupet reported that the Moscow-based firm  Zarubezhneft would explore for oil off north-central Cuba using the  Norwegian-owned Songa Mercur drilling platform. The Russian state-run  company is drilling a 6,500-metre well in an endeavour that is expected  to take six months.
The Cuban government has not lost hope that the country will manage  to become self-sufficient in energy. In another important development  zone, around the port of El Mariel in the province of Artemisa,  bordering Havana, the plan is to create a support base for future oil  industry activity.
But the need to diversify the energy supply is increasingly seen as a priority in Cuba’s current economic reform process.
The province of Cienfuegos has begun to tap renewable energy sources,  the head of the provincial government, Mairelys Pernía, told IPS.
A one megawatt solar park is being built in the province, where there are other projects in the pipeline as well, Pernía said.
The Centre for Local Development Studies (CEDEL) is preparing  training sessions for municipal authorities to learn about the  alternatives and achieve a more sustainable energy mix.
According to CEDEL researcher Ricardo Berriz, this step forward is  “essential for development planning in the country.” The government  institution is currently working with 20 of Cuba’s 168 municipalities,  which are discussing what energy sources they could harness, depending  on local conditions, he told IPS.
“If we move towards a more diverse energy mix, our country will not  only be more independent in terms of energy, but we will solve many  environmental problems as well,” he said.
To illustrate, he mentioned biodigesters that turn animal waste into  clean energy and can be incorporated into production chains.
Half of Cuba’s energy needs are covered by crude oil and natural gas  extracted from land wells and shallow water wells. The rest, nearly  100,000 barrels per day, is imported from Venezuela.
In 2011, only 3.8 percent of the electric power generated in Cuba came from renewable sources.
 
 
 
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