Generic Hero BannerGeneric Hero Banner
Latest market news

PdV restarts limited oil blending

  • Market: Crude oil, Oil products
  • 10/10/19

Venezuela's state-owned PdV and its partners resumed partial crude blending at the Jose terminal after PdV temporarily cleared sanctions-related export bottlenecks, the latest turn in the company's on-again off-again operations.

PetroPiar, PdV's joint venture with Chevron, and PetroSinovensa, PdV's joint venture with China's state-owned CNPC, both restarted blending extra-heavy Orinoco crude with domestic light grades to produce heavy sour Merey for export.

The operations resumed after PdV moved out more than 4mn bl of accumulated crude at the Jose complex in eastern Venezuela to its 940,000 b/d CRP refining complex in western Venezuela and to Cuba.

PdV is seeking to free up about 7mn-8mn bl of storage in its eastern division and simultaneously help to alleviate an acute oil shortage in Cuba, Venezuela's close political ally.

PdV's exports have been constrained by US sanctions that have driven away most traditional buyers, although some such as India's Reliance and Spain's Repsol are still refining Venezuelan crude.

Since the end of September, PdV has shipped about 3mn bl of 16°API Merey blend, diluted crude (DCO) and unprocessed crude and products from the CRP's Amuay and Cardon anchorages in Falcon state. Most of the shipments sent to Cuba between 29 September and 10 October were cabotaged from the Jose anchorage to the CRP before departing for Cuba. Buyers note that much of the overflow supply has excess water.

Up to 4mn bl more could be shipped to Cuba over the coming four to six weeks, two oil union officials at the Jose complex said.

PdV and oil union officials say that some of the oil shipped to Cuba will likely be resold.

The bottlenecks have reverberated upstream. Venezuela produced around 650,000 b/d in September, down by an estimated 100,000 from August.

Lack of tanker capacity to load cargoes at the Jose terminal, which accounts for up to 75pc of PdV's total export shipments, maxed out Venezuela's operational mainland and floating storage capacity at nearly 38mn bl at the end of September, according to oil ministry and PdV eastern division upstream officials.

On paper PdV has about 60mn bl of storage capacity nationally, but at least a third of the storage assets are out of service, the oil ministry official said. Over a decade of poor maintenance, accidents, fires and explosions at PdV terminals, refineries and tank farms have "severely degraded" PdV's storage assets, the ministry official added.

The loss of leased storage in Dutch Caribbean islands has aggravated the logistical challenge.

PetroSinovensa and PetroPiar had been producing around a combined 200,000 b/d of Merey before the export backlog forced the plants to shut down in recent weeks.

PetroSinovensa was producing about 72,000 b/d of Merey before its 30 September shutdown. It is unclear how much blend PetroSinovensa is producing since restarting operations this week, but an oil union official at Jose estimates output at about 40,000 b/d.

PetroPiar had been producing about 130,000 b/d of Merey in July and hoped to reach 170,000 b/d by the end of August. But blend output dropped below 100,000 b/d immediately before it suspended operations in mid-September.

Oil ministry and PdV officials blame US sanctions for the bottlenecks that have forced the company to reduce crude output at numerous fields in Venezuela since early August, including Lagunillas, Bachaquero, Tia Juana and Boscan in Zulia state.

Escalated US sanctions announced on 5 August have discouraged many tanker operators from continuing to do business with PdV during the past nine weeks, causing a significant drop in bookings.

The export constraints has been compounded by personnel problems in PdV's marketing and trading departments. PdV's marketing and trading offices in Caracas are now managed largely by inexperienced personnel who formerly worked in government housing programs under National Guard general Manuel Quevedo before he was named oil minister and PdV chief executive in November 2017.

"The people Quevedo imported into all areas of PdV from the housing programs are loyal to him but do not know anything about chartering tankers and trading oil," an oil union official said.


Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News
22/05/25

Brazil senate passes environmental licensing bill

Brazil senate passes environmental licensing bill

Sao Paulo, 22 May (Argus) — Brazil's senate approved a bill that aims to standardize and, in some cases, speed up environmental licensing that the oil industry has blamed for slowing exploration projects . The bill, which the senate approved Wednesday in a 54 to-13 vote, aims to create national standards for environmental licensing, with the goal of simplifying the process for projects that have a limited environmental impact. The bill also aims to create a new type of environmental license for projects that are considered government priorities. These projects would be subject to a more simplified licensing process that would take one year at most. The creation of a new type of licensing for these projects would potentially facilitate oil exploration in the Amazon, the senate said. The change comes as state-controlled Petrobras pushes to begin offshore drilling in the environmentally sensitive Foz do Amazonas offshore basin . The bill would also exempt agricultural projects from obtaining environmental licensing but would continue to require farmers to obtain authorization to remove native vegetation. It also allows small- and medium-sized projects to self-declare their environmental commitments, without the need to have a proper license. Senator Eliziane Gama criticized that proposal, using the disaster in the Brumadinho dam — which burst in 2019 and was considered a medium-sized project — as an example. Brazilian energy think tank Instituto Acende called the bill an important milestone for Brazil, adding that if approved, it would "reduce legal uncertainty, administrative inefficiencies, and obstacles to sustainable development". Environmentalists slammed the proposal, with Observatorio do Clima calling it the "greatest attack on environmental legislation in four decades". The legislation would approve nearly all new projects without environmental impact studies, the group said. The bill will now return to the lower house because senators altered the original text. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Find out more
News

Oil promise in the spotlight of Suriname election


22/05/25
News
22/05/25

Oil promise in the spotlight of Suriname election

Kingston, 22 May (Argus) — Suriname is heading into a general election on 25 May with the successful party set to oversee rapid economic expansion based on forecast production of crude from fields offshore the smallest country in South America. Fourteen parties are contesting the election in the country of 600,000 people that is the scene of an oil and gas drilling frenzy that will intensify later this year. But opinion surveys suggest the favoured parties are the incumbent conservative Progressive Reform party (VHP) of president Chandrikapersad Santokhi and the left-of-centre National Democratic party (NDP) of Jennifer Geerlings-Simons. The surveys indicate neither will gain an outright majority in the 51-seat national assembly, suggesting a period of uncertainty as parties seek coalition partners. A two-thirds majority of the assembly elects the president. The former Dutch colony could become a major oil producer. Its current production from state firm Staatsolie's onshore Tambaredjo field averages 17,200 b/d. But recoverable oil resources from offshore fields are estimated at 2.4bn bl, while recoverable gas resources could exceed 12.5 Tcf, the government said, referring to reports by independent analysts. The benefits from the development of oil and gas will allow Surinamese "to always live in prosperity," Santokhi said during campaigning. But if the agreements for the development of the resources "are not managed properly, this can lead to extreme inequality in the country," Geerlings-Simons warned. The winning party will have a five-year term, and will oversee the start of offshore crude production in 2028 from French major TotalEnergies' $12.2bn GranMorgu deepwater project that is targeting output of 220,000 b/d. TotalEnergies is expanding its search with the drilling of the first of five exploration wells to be worked by foreign oil companies this year. Malaysia's Petronas is scheduled to work two offshore prospects, Chevron is slated for another while Shell will join the search by December, according to Staatsolie. They will be joined in 2026 by PetroChina. Other companies with production-sharing contracts with Staatsolie include US' Hess and Spain's Moeve, formerly Cepsa. The last days of the campaign have seen Santokhi's administration being accused of using promised earnings from oil to influence voters. The government will give each Surinamese $750 from what it will earn from offshore oil production, it said. "Everyone shall benefit from this opportunity and no one will be left behind," Santokhi said in rejecting the accusations. "All Surinamese are co-owners of the oil incomes." By Canute James Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

US officials squabble on Chevron's Venezuela future


22/05/25
News
22/05/25

US officials squabble on Chevron's Venezuela future

Caracas, 22 May (Argus) — Chevron will be allowed to continue producing and exporting Venezuelan crude, or maybe it will not, depending on which senior US official is speaking. Secretary of state Marco Rubio took to social media late Wednesday night to insist that Chevron's waiver from US sanctions will end as planned on 27 May, contradicting US presidential envoy Ric Grenell's statement a day earlier. "The pro-Maduro Biden oil license in Venezuela will expire as scheduled next Tuesday May 27th," Rubio posted from his personal account on X. Rubio referred to an authorization, originally issued under former president Joe Biden in 2022, that allowed Chevron to import crude into the US produced in its joint venture with state-owned PdV. Grenell had said on Wednesday that he expected an extension of the license after he helped secure the release of US Air Force veteran Joseph St Clair from a Venezuelan prison. Chevron has until 27 May to wind down all business in Venezuela, and neither the company nor the US Treasury Department's sanctions enforcement arm, the Office of Foreign Assets Control, have disclosed if the license would be extended or modified. Venezuela's national assembly president Jorge Rodriguez earlier this week had suggested that the US under President Donald Trump would seek to extend the original license to prevent China from taking over Chevron's space in its joint ventures with PdV. Sources close to the issue in Venezuela had heard until late Wednesday that the extension was in the works. "It's going to happen, Friday is what we are hearing", the source said, indicating multiple currents in the Trump administration. But Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado lobbied against extending the waiver, saying Chevron's presence helps support the Maduro regime, an opposition source in Caracas said. "The [US] wants their hostages, but they are not super eager to hand Maduro a win in return", the source, who has liaised with DC for the opposition said. "La señora complained." By Carlos Camacho Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Iraq signs integrated energy deal with China’s Geo-Jade


22/05/25
News
22/05/25

Iraq signs integrated energy deal with China’s Geo-Jade

Dubai, 22 May (Argus) — Iraq's oil ministry has signed an agreement with China's Geo-Jade Petroleum and local firm Basra Crescent to expand the capacity of the 20,000 b/d Tuba oil field and develop a suite of downstream and power assets, in a move that mirrors recent integrated energy deals with international partners. A key component of the South Basrah Integrated Energy Project will be to raise Tuba's production capacity to 100,000 b/d, oil minister Hayan Abdulghani said at the signing ceremony in Baghdad on 21 May. The project will also include processing of up to 50mn ft³/d of associated gas. Downstream components include a 200,000 b/d refinery, a 620,000 t/yr petrochemical plant and a 520,000 t/yr fertilizer facility. A 650MW thermal power plant and a 400MW solar plant will also be part of the project, Abdulghani said. No financial details or project timelines were disclosed. The agreement marks a further step in Geo-Jade's expansion in Iraq, following its successful participation in the country's fifth and sixth licensing rounds. While the company now holds multiple upstream assets in Iraq, it has yet to bring any into production. The deal follows a similar multi-billion dollar agreement signed with TotalEnergies in 2023 , which bundled gas processing, water treatment and solar power with development of the Ratawi field. In February this year, BP signed a major upstream deal with Iraq that also includes power, water and potentially exploration. By Bachar Halabi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Mexican GDP outlook dims on tariffs: IMEF


21/05/25
News
21/05/25

Mexican GDP outlook dims on tariffs: IMEF

Mexico City, 21 May (Argus) — Mexico's association of finance executives IMEF lowered its 2025 growth forecast for a fourth consecutive month, citing the growing impact of US tariffs on the economy. GDP is now expected to grow just 0.1pc in 2025, according to IMEF's May survey, down from 0.2pc estimates in April, 0.6pc in March and 1pc in February. The number of respondents forecasting a contraction in GDP rose to 16, or 37pc of the sample, from nine in April. While the US has granted some exemptions and discounts for Mexican goods meeting regional content rules, IMEF said the effective tariff rate on Mexican exports remains higher than that for Canada, Brazil, India, Vietnam and others. "We're already seeing the [tariffs'] impacts," said IMEF economic studies director Victor Herrera, adding that May trade data will likely show a sharp drop in Mexican exports to the US. Trade is also being hit by a screwworm outbreak in cattle that led to port closures last week and curtailed beef exports, which account for $1.3bn in annual exports. More automakers could relocate or scale back production in Mexico, Herrera said, after Stellantis confirmed plans to shift some operations to the US and recent reports Nissan may close one or both of its Mexican plants. In response, Mexico this week sent deputy economy minister Luis Rosendo Gutierrez to Tokyo to meet with Mazda, Nissan, Toyota and Honda executives. IMEF cut its 2025 job creation forecast to 200,000 in May from 220,000 in April. Mexico's social security administration IMSS reported only 43,500 new jobs over the past 12 months as of 5 May. Beyond trade, IMEF flagged uncertainty from recent constitutional reforms and the potential for a US tax on remittances as additional risks to growth. The group held its 2025 inflation forecast steady at 3.8pc, despite Mexico's consumer price index rising to 3.93pc in April from 3.80pc in March . IMEF noted concerns about a potential rebound in inflation later this year after the central bank cut its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points to 9pc on 8 May — the third such cut in 2025. The group now sees the end-2025 rate at 7.75pc, down from 8pc previously. IMEF expects the peso to end the year at Ps20.80/$1, slightly lower than the Ps20.90/$1 forecast in April. The peso recently strengthened to Ps19.34/$1, though Herrera said this reflected dollar weakness more than peso strength. By James Young Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more