<article><p class="lead">Venezuela's crude production has recovered to around 500,000 b/d, mainly from the Orinoco heavy oil belt.</p><p>The volume compares to 360,000-390,000 b/d in the second half of 2020, and it is still shy of an average of 650,000 b/d pumped in March last year, according to <i>Argus</i> estimates.</p><p>Orinoco production is running close to 350,000 b/d from Venezuelan state-owned PdV's joint ventures with foreign minority partners, including PetroSinovensa with China's state-owned CNPC, PetroPiar with Chevron and PetroMonagas with Russian partners.</p><p>The oil belt produces extra heavy crude that must be diluted for transport and blended or upgraded into 16°API Merey for export. Output from the region tends to fluctuate as low-yield well flow rates are adjusted in response to diluent availability as well as storage and export openings.</p><p>PdV's mature eastern division is producing more than 100,000 b/d, mostly from PdV's Punta de Mata area, followed by Furrial. The eastern division is also producing about 2.7 Bcf/d of associated natural gas, most of which is flared because of deficient equipment to segregate and process it.</p><p>PdV's western division centered on Lake Maracaibo, where data is generally more opaque and operating conditions are especially precarious, is producing the balance.</p><h3>Dark cash</h3><p>The Venezuelan company's <a href="https://www2.argusmedia.com/en/news/2191218-venezuelan-business-proposes-merchant-refining">depressed refinery runs</a> are only around 100,000 b/d, and crude exports, thwarted by US sanctions since early 2019, have been fluctuating around tanker availability, itself a function of improvised local efforts. </p><p>"People who are owed money by PdV are told to find a vessel, a broker, to export crude and from the sale they can get paid. Or else they are offered fuel oil or scrap metal. This is happening every day," a former senior PdV official says.</p><p>The production uptick will be difficult for the Opec country to sustain, multiple local industry sources routinely say, citing longstanding challenges such as labor flight, electricity shortages, equipment theft and a lack of specialized services. On the labor front, PdV has been paying bonuses to a small group of skilled workers and private oilfield service contractors. </p><p>"The cash bonuses have been a positive incentive but are being paid only to select repair crews and not all PdV oilfield workers," a senior oil union official tells <i>Argus</i>. "This unequal situation is creating more tensions within the oil industry's workforce." </p><p>PdV's average monthly wage paid in cash since a new collective contract was signed on 19 February is less than $3 in cash per worker, plus a further roughly $50 monthly in transportation and food subsidies. Venezuela's crippled economy is suffering from hyperinflation. PdV generates sparse revenue from oil sales, because of oil-backed debts mainly to China and steep discounts. Venezuela's US-backed political opposition says the government of President Nicolas Maduro is raising cash from illicit gold sales carried out through the UAE with Russian logistical help, and is demanding more <a href="https://www2.argusmedia.com/en/news/2189780-us-urges-venezuela-talks-sanctions-on-backburner">sanctions</a>.</p></article>