The Devil's Excrement





  The Devil's Excrement
Observations focused on the problems of an underdeveloped country, Venezuela, with some serendipity about the world (orchids, techs, science, investments, politics) at large. A famous Venezuelan, Juan Pablo Perez Alfonzo, referred to oil as the devil's excrement. For countries, easy wealth appears indeed to be the sure path to failure. Venezuela might be a clear example of that.
Last updated:
4/2/2007; 9:35:12 PM

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Thursday, December 08, 2005



This post is not meant to criticize this Government, it is meant to be critical of a political system that for the last 47 years has mismanaged and continues to mismanage the country, which makes you wonder whether there is something wrong with our ability as a society to get things done, to dream and to accomplish. All of this came to mind this morning while I was reading the paper and I saw that the highway that joins Caracas and the coast, where the international airport is may be closed for three days next week, as concerns that it may fall down mount..

First, let me give you some background. Caracas is in a valley 1,000 meters (3,000 feet) above sea level, separated from the sea by a mountain range which is as high as 6,000 feet high. This is what makes Caracas weather so nice, you are only 11 degrees north of the Equator, but at 1,000 meters of altitude the temperature drops to a very comfortable level, making Caracas one of the best cities in the world, if not the best, in terms of comfortable level. Temperatures range from 16 C to 32 C (60 F to 90 F) during the year and night and day, never going colder, never warmer with humidity levels that seldom top 70%. I know of no other large city in the world with such comfortable weather.

The following map shows the geographical location of the city. (Darker area to the left of “Vargas”. The airport is right at sea level to the North and a little West of the city. There is only one valley through the mountains that goes straight north and even “straight” is just a way of putting it, let's say their is only one north pointing valley. The original highway through this path, the “Carretera Vieja” was 23 Kms. long and had 365 turns, which made the trip slow going and took at least one hour to drive.

Then in 1951, Dictator Marcos Perez Jimenez began building the “Autopista Caracas La Guaira”, which at the time was considered to be an engineering marvel with three majestic viaducts, two tunnels, one of which was almost a mile long and only 36 turns in 15 Km. (from toll to toll in the original design), significantly reducing the drive to the country’s main airport, port and creating a whole recreational beach zone in what is now Vargas state. All of this for only US$ 231 million.

In 1987, engineers noticed that the first Viaduct on the way down from Caracas to La Guaira, was buckling upwards in the middle due to the pressure caused by the south side, as shown in the following diagram, where on the left there is a schematic of the viaduct and on the right how the drifting mountain is pressuring the viaduct ("empuje" means push):



Eighteen years have gone by and despite lots of investments to solve the problem things do not appear to have improved. In fact the buckling is so extreme that in the following picture you can see the shift upwards which is now above 90 cms., an increase of 5 cms. over the last few weeks alone. There has been much work and proposals on how to fix it over the years, but clearly it is not working. This engineer says that what was done to fix it since 1999 is simply wrong because nobody thought of the secondary effects it may have, but I have no clue as to whether he is right or not.


But the point is that it that buckling gives under the pressure, the viaduct may break or even collapse under the strain, leaving the city isolated from its port, airport and leaving thousands of residents of Vargas state inhabitants without access to their jobs in Caracas.

The first graph above shows the problem. There are four possible alternate routes, none of which can handle the volume of the current highway. The old high way, 25 Kms. long was allowed to deteriorate in time, houses were built right up to the edge, and cars are robbed and reportedly have been improved in 90%, whatever that means. You can go over the Avila mountain through the town of Galipan, but going down on the other side implies a dirt road which at times has very steep grades. Only four wheel drive vehicles can really handle this route. Finally there is the El Junquito Carayaca path, some 62 Km. in length and in bad shape or the long way around the Higuerote Chuspa road which would make it 128 Km. and which is in bad shape between Chuspa and La Guaira.

Thus, there is really no practical route that may accommodate the current traffic, creating a very bad situation and hassle for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans. Hours to go to the airport, lost jobs to those that live in Vargas and economic hardship for many.

But think about this fact: It only took three years in 1951 to finish the original highway and this society with its current form of Government has been unable to find a solution to just one of the viaducts that are part of it, despite the importance of the problem.

Over the years, even before the buckling was detected, there were many suggestions that a second access to the Coast should be built. There were basically three suggestions: A second road parallel to the current one, a tunnel straight down from Caracas and a tunnel somewhere along the Caracas Guarenas highway. Many projects were paid for, studies made and much like other public works that have never been started, lots of talk and not much execution.

After the buckling began in 1987, there has also been talk of many alternatives, essentially three: Build an alternate viaduct parallel to the current one, fill the riverbed up the viaduct level and create a bypass that takes you down to the riverbed. Once again, there was talk, talk talk, some studies, but to this date, nothing has been done. The only thing that was done is the current attempt to patch the viaduct up which appears to be failing.

To me this is symptomatic of so many of the problems that ail Venezuela:

-First of all is the ability to dream. Imagine how many jobs would be generated by a second path, road or whatever. Imagine the development that it could generate if, for example, a second path on the East part of Caracas towards Guarenas was built, feeding Vargas state, the same one that suffered the mudslides in 2000 at a different point. Imagine hotel developments between Los Caracas and Chuspa financed internationally.

-Then, there is the fact that each party that comes to power starts believing its own immortality, its ability to remain in power forever. Thus, they get rid of the technical people at the corresponding Ministry, in this case, the Ministry of Infrastructure, replacing them with party hacks, most of which are more concerned with how much commissions they will get, rather than with getting anything done. The result is few good people who want to work for the Government, have a career in Government, reinforcing the mediocrity of the Government and its actions.

-Those at the very top, today Chavez, before Caldera and so on and so forth, are so concerned about politics that they forget they are supposed to govern. They meet to discuss how to stop, crush and obliterate the enemy, but not to decide, follow up and draw plans. Most decisions are political in nature, such as the fact that Chavez decided in 2000 that it was not worth redeveloping Vargas, because his Minister Giordani believes in moving people away from Caracas. People were taken away and they are mostly back to Vargas. They were simply moved to places where there were no jobs; they had no family and were given little help other than relocating them.

-People want things for free. From the time I was a little kid (Most of you were born after that), the toll in the Caracas La Guaira highway was Bs. 3 per car, at a time that the US$ was 3.5 to 4.3 bolivars per dollar. Inflation came, the currency was devalued and the toll was kept at Bs. 3. It became more expensive to collect it than to eliminate it. Toll workers would steal the money too. The tolls were eliminated. Then they were revived at the time that the Bolivar stood at Bs. 270 per US$, increased to Bs. 100, all of 37 cents US. People complained, there were even demonstrations. Later, a Mexican consortium won a bidding process to maintain the road in exchange for collecting the toll for 30 years, with the price of the toll indexed to inflation. The price was never increased. Then the people who drove along the road held protests (Note these are people who own cars, not your average poor Venezuelan exactly), they blocked the road asking for the elimination of the 37 cent toll. The Government gave in, broke the contract with the Mexican company, which cost it some US$ 13 million in arbitration and that was the end of that. (As if the gasoline subsidy was not sufficient!)

And now we appear to be ready to pay the consequence of our mismanagement, populism and lack of planning. The amazing thing is, we dreamt, planned, built and ran that original road for years, so, what changed?


9:13:53 PM    comment []



Demolishing Report by Teodoro Petkoff in Tal Cual

The reports of the OAS and the European Union, especially the second, with its meticulous equilibrium and abundant presentation of concrete cases-without diminishing the seriousness of the second one-give full backing to our diagnosis: the Venezuelan electoral system and its ruling body, the CNE, are in intensive care. Because the task of providing a country with a trustworthy electoral system concerns all of society and all political actors, one of them, the Government, should pay attention to what was observed and transmitted by both foreign missions, because the objections are very serious and they force it to sit down with all actors, political parties from both the opposition and officialdom, to discuss the design of the new Electoral Law, as well as the naming of a CNE that deserves respect. Now one can not say that it is a matter of bad faith of the opposition factions in a “campaign against the CNE” or of “coupsters” or of “following the instructions of the empire”, because the international observers were not and could not have been implicated with any of the parts in the national political scene. Its impartiality can be counted on. From the Government, the main interested party, should come out a formal invitation that the Foreign Minister appeared to formulate last Monday.

It is also obvious, that the necessary redesign of the electoral system forces democratic parties in the opposition to understand that on these matters a dialogue with the Government is indispensable. The rules of the electoral game and the new CNE must be the result of a national agreement and such an agreement can only come out from a civilized interchange of opinions, around a negotiation table. There is no other way, because any other thing would suppose unilateral decisions that would be without any doubt, counterproductive. For democratic parties compromised with a strategy that goes through elections, the perspective of a meeting with official representatives must be assumed with a positive spirit. Of course, such a dialogue would require the creation of scenarios outside of the Parliament, given that the opposition parties are absent form the National Assembly.

The country is at a dramatic crossroads. The data point that an extremely high percentage of Venezuelans that were in his orbit, not only did not attend the call that Chávez himself made during the campaign, but the fact that they did not even allowed themselves to be dragged by the powerful logistical apparatus of Chavez’ MVR and its allies, forces a deep reflection in the high command of officialdom. Something is happening. But, if for the Government the electoral road continues to be the road, the recovery of the seriousness of the vote can not be foreign to it, if it aspires to revive the essence of an electoral process, which is the competition between opposing factions. For the democratic parties of the opposition, on the other hand, the suitability of electoral instruments will be decisive. Without that, it will be impossible to compete. To procure it is thus a priority for everyone, for both the Government as well as the democratic opposition.


12:45:05 AM    comment []



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