Venezuela's state-run oil holding Pdvsa and its affiliates
in 2007 contracted new debts amounting to USD 13.12 billion,
thus taking their debt to equity ratio to 29.72 percent.
The figure was disclosed on Pdvsa's official website in a
report on Pdvsa's debt status, as found in an audit on the
holding's debt at the end of 2007 conducted by KPMG's auditors
Alcaraz, Cabrera & Vázquez.
The document shows that Pdvsa's consolidated assets -including
assets abroad- soared USD 106.99 billion, with equity closing
2007 at USD 53.85 billion.
The figures show that consolidated assets climbed USD 26.47
billion (32.8 percent) and equity increased by USD 751 million
(1.4 percent), compared to the audited financial statements
of 2006.
The numbers also confirm Pvdsa CEO and Minister of Energy
and Petroleum Rafael Ramírez's announcement last month
that the conglomerate's consolidated debt grew in 2007. He
added, however, that assets soared too in the same period,
as amidst strategic partnerships at the Orinoco Oil Belt migrated
to joint ventures where Pdvsa holds a majority stake.
However, while the debt increased fivefold in only 12 months
-a 449 percent growth, from USD 2.91 billion to more than
USD 16 billion-, the company's consolidated assets grew only
2 percent, from USD 53.10 billion to USD 53.85 billion.