Caracas and Washington have reached a deal to export up to $2 billion worth of Venezuelan crude to the US, US President Donald Trump said, a flagship negotiation that would divert supplies from China while helping Venezuela avoid deeper oil production cuts.
The agreement is a
strong sign that the Venezuelan government is responding to Trump's demand hat
they open up to US oil companies or risk more military intervention,
reported Reuters.
Trump has said he
wants interim President Delcy Rodriguez to give the US and private
companies "total access" to Venezuela's oil industry.
Venezuela has millions
of barrels of oil loaded on tankers and in storage tanks that it has been
unable to ship due to a blockade on exports imposed by Trump since
mid-December.
The blockade was part
of rising US pressure on the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro
that culminated in US forces capturing him this weekend. Top Venezuelan
officials have called Maduro's capture a kidnapping and accused the US of
trying to steal the country's vast oil reserves.
Venezuela will be
"turning over" between 30 and 50 million barrels of "sanctioned
oil" to the US, Trump said in a social media post.
"This Oil will be
sold at its Market Price, and that money will be controlled by me, as President
of the US of America, to ensure it is used to benefit the people of Venezuela
and the US!" he added.
US Energy Secretary
Chris Wright is in charge of executing the deal, Trump said, adding that the
oil will be taken from ships and sent directly to US ports.
Supplying the trapped
crude to the US could initially require reallocating cargoes originally bound
for China, two sources had told Reuters. The Asian country has been Venezuela's
top buyer in the last decade and especially since the US imposed sanctions on
companies involved in oil trade with Venezuela in 2020.
"Trump wants this
to happen early so he can say it is a big win," an oil industry source
said.
Venezuelan government
officials and PDVSA did not provide comment.
CHEVRON IN CONTROL OF
VENEZUELAN OIL FLOWS TO US
US crude prices fell
more than 1.5 per cent after Trump's announcement, with the agreement expected
to increase the volume of Venezuelan oil exported to the US
That flow of oil is
currently controlled entirely by Chevron, PDVSA's main joint venture partner,
under a US authorisation.
Chevron, which has
been exporting between 100,000 and 150,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Venezuelan
oil to the US, is the only company that has been loading and shipping crude
without interruption from the South American country in recent weeks under the
blockade.
It was not immediately
clear if Venezuela would have any access to proceeds from the supply. Sanctions
mean PDVSA is excluded from the global financial system, its bank accounts are
frozen and it is blocked from executing transactions in US dollars.
Venezuela has been
selling its flagship crude grade, Merey, at around $22 per barrel below Brent
for delivery at Venezuelan ports, giving a value for the deal at up to $1.9
billion.
Rodriguez, sworn
in as interim president, is herself under US sanctions imposed in 2018 for
undermining democracy.
TALKS INVOLVE POSSIBLE
AUCTIONS WITH US BUYERS
Venezuelan and US
officials this week discussed possible sales mechanisms, including auctions to
allow interested US buyers to bid for cargoes, and issuing US licenses to
PDVSA's business partners that could lead to supply contracts, two sources told
Reuters.
Those licenses have in
the past allowed PDVSA's joint venture partners and customers, including
Chevron, India's Reliance China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) and
European Eni and Repsol to have access to Venezuelan oil to refine or
to resell to third parties.
This week, some of
those companies have begun making preparations for receiving Venezuelan cargoes
again, two separate sources said.
The US and Venezuela
have also discussed if Venezuelan oil can be used in the US Strategic Petroleum
Reserve in the future, one of the sources said. Trump did not refer to this
possibility.
INCREASED OIL FLOWS
WOULD BE 'GREAT NEWS'
US Interior Secretary
Doug Burgum said on Tuesday that an increased flow of Venezuelan heavy oil to
the US Gulf would be "great news" for job security, future gasoline
prices in the US and for Venezuela.
"Venezuela has an
opportunity now to actually have capital come in and rebuild their economy and
take advantage," he told Fox News, when asked about talks between the
governments on oil exports. "With American technology, American partnership,
Venezuela can be transformed."
US refineries on the
Gulf Coast can process Venezuela's heavy crude grades and were importing some
500,000 barrels per day (bpd) before Washington first imposed energy sanctions
on Venezuela.
PDVSA has already had
to cut production due to the embargo, because it is running out of storage for
the oil. Without a way to export oil soon, it would have to cut production
more, one of the sources said.
Oil traders reacted to news of the deal talks on Tuesday. Differentials for some heavy oil grades in the US Gulf slipped around 50 cents per barrel on Tuesday on the prospect of more Venezuelan supplies. -TradeArabia News Service