Cuba to outline oil plans at drilling conference

MIAMI, (Reuters) – Cuba hopes to counter U.S.  worries over its plans to start its first full-scale offshore  oil exploration in a rare presentation this week to an energy  audience outside the communist-led island.

Officials involved in Cuba’s oil project are expected to  discuss drilling plans and safety standards during a two-day  meeting of international drilling contractors opening today in Trinidad and Tobago.

In the wake of last year’s BP oil spill in the Gulf of  Mexico, some U.S. officials and politicians have voiced concern  over Cuba’s drilling plans and whether it can ensure its  offshore drilling will be safe.

One congressman from Florida has introduced legislation  that would authorize punitive action against companies who  drill off Cuba, citing environmental dangers.

“This will pretty much be the first time the Cuban  deepwater drilling project managers will make a presentation of  what their regulatory requirements are going to be for the  companies that drill in Cuban waters,” said Lee Hunt, president  of the Houston-based International Association of Drilling  Contractors, which is organizing the conference.

“There is a lot of incomplete information out there,” he  said.

Offshore Oil exploration is important for Cuba, which is  just 90 miles (145 kms) from the southernmost tip of Florida.  Cuba needs oil to sustain its battered economy and end its  dependence on oil-rich socialist ally Venezuela.

After repeated delays, large-scale exploration by Cuba in  its part of the Gulf of Mexico is set to begin later this year  with the arrival of a Chinese-built drilling rig to be used  first by a consortium led by Spanish oil company Repsol YPF. It  will then be passed to other non-U.S. oil companies for  exploration in drilling leases they hold in Cuba’s part of the  Gulf of Mexico.

Other companies in the consortium include Norway’s Statoil  and ONGC Videsh, a unit of India’s Oil and Natural Gas Corp.

No American firms are allowed to participate in the Cuban  oil project because of a decades-old U.S. trade embargo  preventing them from doing business in Cuba.