Skip to main content
Topic: Chevron can resume key role in Venezuela’s oil output, exports (Read 31 times) previous topic - next topic

Chevron can resume key role in Venezuela’s oil output, exports

Chevron can resume key role in Venezuela’s oil output, exports

[html]By Daphne Psaledakis and Marianna Parraga WASHINGTON/HOUSTON (Reuters) -Chevron Corp on Saturday received a U.S. license allowing the second-largest U.S. oil co*pany…
                              

By Daphne Psaledakis and Marianna Parraga


WASHINGTON/HOUSTON (Reuters) -Chevron Corp on Saturday received a U.S. license allowing the second-largest U.S. oil co*pany to expand its production in Venezuela and bring the South American country’s crude oil to the United States.


The decision grants broader rights for the last big U.S. oil co*pany still operating in U.S.-sanctioned Venezuela. However, it restricts any cash payments to Venezuela, which could reduce the oil available to export.


License terms are designed to prevent state-run oil firm Petróleos de Venezuela, known as PDVSA, from receiving proceeds from Chevron’s petroleum sales, U.S. officials said. The license lasts for six months and will be automatically renewed monthly thereafter, the U.S. Treasury said.


The U.S. authorization “brings added transparency to the Venezuelan oil sector” and allows Chevron to benefit from sales of “oil that is currently being produced” by its joint ventures with PDVSA, the California-based co*pany said in a statement.


POLITICAL TALKS


Following oil sanctions on Venezuela in 2019, Chevron received an exemption to trade its Venezuelan crude to recoup pending debts. But those privileges were suspended a year later. Chevron’s four PDVSA joint ventures produced about 200,000 barrels per day of crude oil and exported the crude around the world prior to the sanctions. 


The United States issued the license on the same day that Venezuela and opposition leaders began a political dialogue in Mexico City by agreeing to ask the United Nations to oversee a fund providing food, healthcare and infrastructure to Venezuelans.


Terms bar Chevron from helping the OPEC member develop new oilfields but provides a way for the co*pany to recoup some of the billions of dollars owed by PDVSA through the oil sales. It also allows the U.S. co*pany to import supplies to help process the country’s crude oil into exportable grades.


Oilfield service firms Baker Hughes, Halliburton, Schlumberger and Weatherford International had their U.S. licenses renewed but not expanded. That limits any wider expansion of Venezuelan oil production.


Spokespeople for the four, only two of which still have equipment in the country, did not immediately respond to requests for co*ment, or had no immediate co*ment.


The United States, which first levied sanctions on PDVSA in 2017, said it reserved the right to rescind or revoke the license at any time. A spokesperson insisted the authorization was not a response to this year’s sharp rise in energy prices.


“This action reflects longstanding U.S. policy to provide targeted sanctions relief based on concrete steps that alleviate the suffering of the Venezuelan people and support the restoration of democracy,” the U.S. Treasury Department said in a statement.


The United States over the years has increased sanctions on Venezuela, seeking to oust socialist President Nicolas Maduro over his 2018 reelection, which was not recognized by the west. Maduro has clung to power with the help of PDVSA, Russia and Iran.


Maduro has gained new clout with the rise of leftist leaders in Latin America and a fractured opposition struggling from a lack of funds, and with leaders exiled or imprisoned.


U.S. officials traveled to Caracas this year and held talks that led to the release of seven Americans held in Venezuelan jails in return for the release of two relatives of Maduro held on drug convictions.


U.S. REFINERS


The authorization provides limited new supplies of crude to a market struggling to replace Russian barrels shunned by Western buyers over its invasion of Ukraine. Chevron and other U.S. oil refiners could benefit from supplies of Venezuela’s heavy crude flowing to their U.S. Gulf Coast processing plants.


Analysts cautioned that Maduro is likely to bristle at license restrictions, including the lack of cash payments that his administration sought.


The authorization bans any payment of oil royalties and taxes to the Venezuelan government, or in-kind payments to PDVSA. It also bars Chevron from transactions with Russian-controlled co*panies operating in Venezuela.       


Terms will “require significant reporting by Chevron on financial operations of their joint ventures to ensure transparency,” a U.S. official said, adding that other sanctions on Venezuela and its officials remain in place.


“There is not a big incentive in the short term” for Venezuela, said Francisco Monaldi, an expert on Latin American energy policy at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy. Terms could be relaxed over time, he added.


“We’ll see how Maduro’s government reacts to it and how many cargoes will be assigned to Chevron after,” Monaldi said. 


The United States earlier this year began considering Chevron’s request to expand operations with more urgency as Washington sought oil to replace supplies hit by sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine and more recently as OPEC cut its output.


Venezuela holds about 300 billion barrels of oil reserves, the world’s largest, but has been unable to hit its production targets due to underinvestment, poor maintenance, lack of supplies and U.S. sanctions.


(Reporting by Marianna Parraga and Daphne Psaledakis; Writing by Gary McWilliams; Editing by Marguerita Choy and Richard Chang)


tagreuters.c**2022binary_LYNXMPEIAP07Y-BASEIMAGE

[/html]

Source: Chevron can resume key role in Venezuela’s oil output, exports (http://ht**://www.oann.c**/business/chevron-can-resume-key/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=chevron-can-resume-key)