Citgo foresees Venezuela oil swaps, refinery works: CEO

  • Spanish Market: Crude oil, LPG, Oil products
  • 23/08/21

US refiner Citgo has a "mission" to replenish Venezuelan fuel supply after sanctions are lifted, chief executive Carlos Jordá told Argus.

Estranged from its Venezuelan state-owned parent PdV since the US recognized an interim Venezuelan government and imposed oil sanctions in 2019, Citgo is now a de facto independent refiner, Jordá said. But the company expects to play a "bridge" role during a political transition and reconstruction period.

"We will receive Venezuelan crude oil in exchange for product, 100,000-150,000 b/d, maybe more. There is a need for that until Venezuela gets something done in the refining sector," the former PdV veteran executive said in a 20 August interview.

He noted that PdV had 1.3mn b/d of refining capacity, and Venezuela used to consume 500,000 b/d of products. But the country's economic collapse and acute fuel shortages have whittled down consumption to only around 100,000 b/d.

Venezuelan drivers now wait for hours or even days to tank up. Diesel has also grown scarce since the US banned crude-for-diesel swaps late last year.

"It is not going to be easy, but eventually something will get done with the refineries. Maybe not 500,000 b/d but 300,000 b/d of capacity will be restored. Venezuela cannot be 100pc dependent on imports," he said. "Citgo could provide a bridge for products and help someone to get those refineries started."

For Jordá, who formerly headed PdV's refining operations from Caracas, foreign investment to re-establish Venezuela's oil industry will focus upstream. "It is hard to get capital to go into refining. Look what happened in Hovensa," he said, referring to the former PdV-Hess joint venture on St Croix in the US Virgin Islands. Now in the hands of US private equity, the refurbished Limetree Bay refinery restarted early this year only to be ordered shut on environmental grounds.

Carbon tax burden

Any future arrangement with PdV would need to be arms length and make economic sense for both sides, Jordá said.

He warns that a potential carbon tax would make it more difficult for Venezuela to recover. "It could get complicated. Selling heavy oil is going to be challenging for anyone."

In practice, Citgo has already moved past its Venezuelan feedstock roots.

The company's two Gulf coast refineries, 425,000 b/d Lake Charles and 157,500 b/d Corpus Christi, were designed to process mostly Venezuelan heavy crude. In response to changing market conditions, Lake Charles has been reconfigured to take 90-95pc light crude, while Corpus Christi is up to 65pc, and would go higher if debt-burdened Citgo had the access to capital to pay for it, Jordá said.

Citgo now processes mostly US crude, topped off with Colombian, Mexican and Canadian grades.

Like its US peers, Citgo is restricted from supplying Venezuela so long as the sanctions are in place. And even though the US recently authorized LPG sales to Venezuela, Citgo is not a specialized LPG supplier. Even if it were to step in, Jordá said a continued ban on swaps thwarts any deal, because suppliers would need cash prepayment, which PdV is unlikely to provide.


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17/05/24

Houston refiners weather hurricane-force winds: Update

Houston refiners weather hurricane-force winds: Update

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Rio Grande do Sul remaneja fornecimento de gás


17/05/24
17/05/24

Rio Grande do Sul remaneja fornecimento de gás

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Brazil's Rio Grande do Sul reallocates gas supply


17/05/24
17/05/24

Brazil's Rio Grande do Sul reallocates gas supply

Sao Paulo, 17 May (Argus) — Natural gas supply in Brazil's Rio Grande do Sul had to be redistributed because of the historic floods in the state, with diesel potentially making its way back as an power plant fuel to leave more gas available for LPG production. Gasbol, the natural gas transportation pipeline that supplies Brazil's south, does not have capacity to meet demand from the 201,000 b/d Alberto Pasqualini refinery (Refap), state-controlled Petrobras' Canoas thermal power plant and natural gas distributors in the region, according to Petrobras' then-chief executive Jean Paul Prates said earlier this week. The Santa Catarina state gas distributor has adjusted its own local network to meet peak demand in neighboring Rio Grande do Sul via the pipeline transportation network. The Canoas thermal plant is running at its minimum generation at 150GW, with 61pc coming from its gas turbine. The plant was brought on line to reinstate proper power supply after transmission lines in the south were affected by the floods. Petrobras plans to use a diesel engine to increase power generation. The current approved fuel cost (CVU) for diesel in the Canoas plant is of R1,115.29/MWh. Petrobras is also operating Refap at 59pc of its maximum installed capacity, at 119,506 b/d. Heavy showers in Rio Grande do Sul since 29 April brought unprecedented flooding to the state, causing a humanitarian crisis and infrastructure damage. The extreme weather has left 154 people dead, 98 missing and over 540,000 people displaced, according to the state's civil defense. By Rebecca Gompertz Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Houston area refiners weather hurricane-force winds


17/05/24
17/05/24

Houston area refiners weather hurricane-force winds

Houston, 17 May (Argus) — Over 2mn b/d of US refining capacity faced destructive winds Thursday evening as a major storm blew through Houston, Texas, but the damage reported so far has been minimal. Wind speeds of up to 78 Mph were recorded in northeast Houston and the Houston Ship Channel — home to five refineries with a combined 1.5mn b/d of capacity — faced winds up to 74 Mph, according to the National Weather Service . Further South in Galveston Bay, where Valero and Marathon Petroleum refineries total 818,000 b/d of capacity, max wind speeds of 51 Mph were recorded. Chevron's 112,000 b/d Pasadena refinery on the Ship Channel just east of downtown Houston sustained minor damage during the storm and continues to supply customers, the company said. ExxonMobil's 564,000 b/d Baytown refinery on the Ship Channel and 369,000 b/d Beaumont, Texas, refinery further east faced no significant impact from the storm and the company continues to supply customers, a spokesperson told Argus . Neither Phillips 66's 265,000 b/d Sweeny refinery southwest of Houston nor its 264,000 b/d Lake Charles refinery 140 miles east in Louisiana were affected by the storm, a spokesperson said. There was no damage at Motiva's 626,000 b/d Port Arthur, Texas, refinery according to the company. Marathon Petroleum declined to comment on operations at its 593,000 b/d Galveston Bay refinery. Valero, LyondellBasell, Pemex, Total, Calcasieu and Citgo did not immediately respond to requests for comment on operations at their refineries in the Houston area, Port Arthur and Lake Charles. A roughly eight-mile portion of the Houston Ship Channel from the Sidney Sherman Bridge to Greens Bayou closed from 9pm ET 16 May to 1am ET today when two ships brokeaway from their moorings, and officials looked in a potential fuel oil spill, according to the US Coast Guard. The portion that closed provides access to Valero's 215,000 b/d Houston refinery, LyondellBasell's 264,000 b/d Houston refinery and Chevron's Pasadena refinery. By Nathan Risser Houston area refineries Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Texas barge collision shuts GIWW section: Correction


16/05/24
16/05/24

Texas barge collision shuts GIWW section: Correction

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