Chevron applies for Venezuela license renewal, proposes wider business

Chevron applies for Venezuela license renewal, proposes wider business

Photo: Marco Bello – Reuters

 

Chevron Corp has asked the U.S. government to expand its license to operate in Venezuela after the oil major agreed with state-run PDVSA to revamp joint ventures in the sanctioned country, six people close to the matter said.

By Reuters – 

Sep 01, 2022

Chevron’s authorization request is the California-based company’s latest attempt to have a greater say in its Venezuelan ventures, revive production and resume trading Venezuelan oil. U.S. sanctions in recent years have sharply cut the country’s production and restricted operations, especially those with foreign partners. 

Last spring, Chevron won approval to negotiate with Venezuelan officials, but Washington insisted that it would not ease sanctions without progress on a dialogue between President Nicolás Maduro and the political opposition led by Juan Guaido.

In late August, the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) asked Chevron for clarification and details of the deal with PDVSA, two of the people said.

Chevron’s chances of getting approval for expanded business in Venezuela could be slim without concrete results from talks between Maduro and the country’s opposition.

At stake are millions of barrels of Venezuelan oil that could help replace Russian supplies that some European nations and the United States have barred following the invasion of Ukraine. An expanded license also could allow Chevron to recoup at least a portion of billions of dollars in unpaid debts from its four joint ventures. 

Chevron declined to comment, adding the company complies with the sanctions framework.

“We remain committed to the safety and wellbeing of our employees and their families, the integrity of our joint venture assets and the company’s social and humanitarian program,” said spokesman Ray Fohr.

The U.S. Treasury declined to comment. PDVSA and Venezuela’s oil ministry did not reply to a request for comment.

DEEP REVAMP

The Chevron-PDVSA pact covers a deep revamping of activities at their four projects. It includes a crude-for-diluents swap to facilitate heavy oil processing for export at the large Petropiar venture in the Orinoco Belt, and proposes to resume Petroboscan venture’s oil production, recently halted due to operational bottlenecks, two of the people said.

“Chevron wants to have more influence on the ventures’ procurement, staff hiring and oil trading,” another person said. “From PDVSA’s point of view, the projects will continue being its business units, so it will appoint their managers,” that person added.

PDVSA has agreed to rely on Chevron key operational decisions, even though legal modifications to the partnership’s stakeholding are not planned in the short term, the people said.

Venezuela’s oil minister Tareck El Aissami this week said “the ball is on the U.S. government’s court” when asked about negotiations with Chevron. “We have discussed and agreed with (Chevron) everything related to the immediate restitution of operations.”

Read More: Reuters – Chevron applies for Venezuela license renewal, proposes wider business

La Patilla in English

Exit mobile version