US imposes embargo on Venezuela

  • Market: Crude oil, Oil products
  • 06/08/19

The US issued an economic embargo against Venezuela, stepping up financial pressure against the Opec-member nation as a defiant President Nicolas Maduro maintains control over the country.

The embargo blocks the transfer of any property or shares of property in the United States held by the government of Venezuela or anyone determined by the Treasury and State departments to be supporters of the Venezuelan government. Licenses exempting certain business — including those for US independent refiner Citgo which is controlled by Venezuelan national oil firm PdV, and Chevron's minority stake in a Venezuelan synthetic crude joint venture with PdV — remain in place.

Venezuela joins Iran and Cuba on a short list of countries the US has placed under embargo, an expansion of sanctions aimed at discouraging any countries from doing business with those nations. But the tactic has not dissuaded Maduro supporters China or Russia from continuing business with any of the other embargoed countries.

It was not immediately clear whether the action would affect efforts by former Canadian mining firm Crystallex to pursue shares of Citgo to satisfy a $1.4bn arbitration award against Venezuela. The opposition has lobbied the US to block any such transfer following last week's ruling by the US Third Circuit Court of Appeals upholding Crystallex's efforts. The decision could lead to an auction of the controlling company's shares later this year, a move that has rattled lenders and affirmed a path for companies seeking payment for more than $150bn in arbitration awards and other debt.

The US imposed sanctions on Venezuela in January to cut off revenue to the Maduro government and support new elections headed by National Assembly leader Juan Guaido. The US and more than 50 western governments recognize Guaido as an interim president.

Guaido has installed directors of Citgo and PdV, an action upheld by the Delaware Chancery Court late last week. But the opposition leader has not expanded his control inside Venezuela, and an April attempt to depose Maduro fizzled.

US crude imports from Venezuela, once the third-largest supplier of heavy, sour crude, fell to zero in May.


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Pemex bajo presión para mantener refinación alta

Pemex bajo presión para mantener refinación alta

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Además, las refinerías de Salina Cruz (330,000 b/d) y Tula (315,000 b/d), las más grandes de México, siguen batallando con una producción elevada de combustóleo con alto contenido de azufre, lo que limita las capacidades de las refinerías para operar a altas tasas simultáneamente. Pemex lleva mucho tiempo luchando con la elevada producción de combustóleo, ya que México produce principalmente crudo pesado, lo que crea una serie de desafíos operativos. El combustóleo suele ocupar valioso espacio de almacenamiento necesario para productos de mayor valor, lo que puede limitar la producción de combustibles más ligeros. Las exportaciones récord de combustóleo en marzo, impulsadas por un aumento de la demanda en la costa del Golfo de EE. UU. después de los reacondicionamientos de la refinería, permitieron a Pemex elevar las operaciones en ambas refinerías simultáneamente. Sin embargo, el problema podría volver a afectar a Pemex en los próximos meses cuando la demanda de combustóleo disminuya y la empresa se vea obligada a almacenar el producto. Pemex está construyendo unidades de coquización en ambas refinerías para resolver este problema, pero no se espera que la unidad de Tula comience a funcionar hasta al menos finales de año, mientras que la unidad de coquización de Salina Cruz comenzaría a finales de 2025. Mientras tanto, la refinería Cadereyta de 275.000 b/d podría compensar parcialmente una disminución en el procesamiento de crudo en Tula y Salina Cruz, ya que su configuración le permite producir menos combustóleo, una fuente familiarizada con las operaciones de Pemex ha dicho a Argus . Las tasas de refinación de Pemex comenzaron a caer en 2014 después de que la administración anterior decidiera depender menos de la producción nacional y centrarse en abrir el mercado de la energía, antes hermético a inversiones externas. En cambio, López Obrador invirtió al menos $3.7 mil millones en mantenimiento para las refinerías antiguas de Pemex de 2019-2023, excluyendo proyectos importantes como las coquizadoras en construcción, además de $17 mil millones para la nueva refinería Olmeca. Cambios en el flujo de crudo y combustible Los mayores niveles de refinación de Pemex han disminuido el flujo de crudo y combustible entre México y EE. UU., y el arranque de Olmeca podría alterar aún más los flujos. Pemex redujo sus importaciones de gasolina y diésel en 25pc a 419,000 b/d en marzo, comparado con 562,000 b/d el año pasado, como resultado de un mejor rendimiento de las refinerías. Las exportaciones de crudo de México cayeron un 29pc hasta un mínimo histórico de 687,000 b/d en marzo, por una menor producción y mayores niveles de refinación. El flujo de crudo y combustible entre México y EE. 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