It really does not matter much if Chavez is dead or alive. China has or soon will have invested nearly 100 billion in development of the world's largest shale oil deposit and the construction of two new heavy oil refineries (Brazil's PetroBras is building one there too - will get 40% of its out put for ever. That refinery is idential to one being built in Brazil which only produced heavy oil. Venezuela gets 40% of its out put "for ever." Cost of these two refineries is 50/50 split between the two countries, but each would pay more for one if separately designed.)"When," not "if?"
Chavez isn't going to do any such thing, at least on purpose. He might well mismanage Venezuela's production to the point where they aren't producing any oil to sent to any refineries (oil production in Venezuela is down 25% since Chavez took over, fired all the technicians at the state oil company, and started using it as a piggy-bank instead of investing in production). But more likely he'll be dead and/or out of office by the end of next year anyway. Anyway he's been blustering about this for years now - if he were seriously going to do it, he'd already have.
China is to be repaid in Venezuelan oil. - Then Venezuela's heavy crude will not be coming to the US Gulf coast refineries. That is why the DoE is so desperate to get the Keystone extension pipeline built. - It will bring Canadian heavy shale oil to these Gulf Coast refineries when they don't have crude from Venezuela.
Look at post163 of this thread to get better informed. There you can read following quotes from DoE:
“…The US Dept of Energy (DoE) concluded that these pipelines to BC would open the Canadian oil sands to Asian markets and result in a substantial increase in US reliance on oil sourced from unstable and/or hostile Middle Eastern and African regimes.
The DoE report found that “the same slate of crude oils would have to be refined even if reallocated geographically.” "In other words, Canadian oil sands crude is going to find its way to market. …”
See in post 163 map of the keystone pipeline, even the pipes waiting for funding / final approval to go into the ground. …
"According to a 2011 study by the Canadian Energy Research Institute (CERI), new oil sands investments are expected to create 444,000 new US jobs by 2035. As for right now, TransCanada’s Robert Jones, the executive in charge of the project, recently noted that Keystone XL is indeed “shovel ready” and that construction would involve hiring as many as 10,000 Americans immediately and up 34,000 by 2014.…”
Quoted text from: http://money.cnn.com/2010/12/23/news/economy/oil_sands_pipeline/index.htm?a=4
Read more on this here: http://www.sciforums.com/showpost.php?p=2667151&postcount=62
and for China’s role in leaving the US “high and dry”, oil wise, read last half of post here: http://www.sciforums.com/showpost.php?p=2742509&postcount=395
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