USGS reviews Cuba's oil potential
Report finds no commercial quantities of oil or gas in deepwater reserves.
By Daniel J. Graeber       |  	April 1, 2015 at 6:34 AM
WASHINGTON, April 1 (UPI) -- Most of Cuba's petroleum demand is met by 
Venezuela and there is no commercial production from deep offshore 
reserves, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
USGS said it produced a briefing on Cuba's extractive industries in 
response to the re-establishment of diplomatic ties with the United 
States. Ties between both countries were severed in 1961.
Prior to the trade embargo enacted in 1962, U.S. companies held 
interests in several petroleum refineries in Cuba. Now, USGS said 
Venezuela dominates the sector by meeting more than 60 percent of the 
country's petroleum demand. The second largest refinery in Cuba 
processes only Venezuelan crude oil.
Most of the Cuban petroleum production comes from coastal reserve areas 
east of Havana.
"As of 2015, deepwater drilling by such foreign companies as Repsol of 
Spain and Zarubezhneft of Russia has resulted in no discovery of 
commercial quantities of oil or gas," the USGS report read.
The report follows a bill introduced last week by two Florida 
congressmen that would force companies to pay for oil cleanup on U.S. 
soil. Rep. Carlos Curbelo, R-Fla., and his Democratic counterpart, 
Patrick Murphy, said they were concerned about Havana's oil spill 
response plans now that Cuba was opening its doors.
A delegation from the U.S. National Oil Spill Commission visited Cuba in 
2011 to examine Havana's oil plans. Cuba the same year announced plans 
to ease the dependency on Venezuela by developing its offshore reserves.
USGS estimated there were about 4.6 billion barrels of crude oil and 9.8 
trillion cubic feet of natural gas in the form of undiscovered, 
technically recoverable, reserves in Cuba. About three quarters of that 
is said to be located within 50 miles from shore.
Source: No deepwater reserves off Cuba as of 2015, USGS finds - UPI.com 
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http://www.upi.com/Business_News/Energy-Resources/2015/04/01/USGS-reviews-Cubas-oil-potential/2711427881524/
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