https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-oil-exports/venezuelan-oil-exports-fell-by-a-third-in-2019-as-us-sanctions-bit-data-idUSKBN1Z627P
(Reuters) - Venezuela’s oil exports plummeted 32% last year to 1.001
million barrels per day, according to Refinitiv Eikon data and state-run
PDVSA’s reports, as a lack of staff and capital drove output to its
lowest level in almost 75 years and U.S. sanctions shrank exports
markets.
The drop would have been steeper if some of PDVSA’s largest customers
had not bought Venezuelan oil through intermediaries or trans-shipped
cargoes off several ports around the world so the country of origin was
blurred, according to industry sources, vessel trackers and Eikon data.
In
terms of customers, Russia’s Rosneft was the largest receiver and
intermediary of Venezuelan oil with 33.5% of total exports, followed by
state-run China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) and its units with 11%,
and Cuba’s state-run Cubametales with 7%, the data showed.
PDVSA did not reply to a request for comment.
China
emerged as the first destination for Venezuelan oil in 2019 as sanctions
deprived PDVSA of its primary market, the United States. That was
despite CNPC and its units halting the loading of crude at Venezuelan
ports in the second half.
Venezuela sent an average
of 319,507 bpd to China in cargoes covering direct routes as well as in
vessels chartered by intermediaries that ended up reaching Chinese
refiners after trans-shipping the oil off countries like Malaysia, the
Eikon vessel tracking data showed.
U.S. sanctions on Venezuelan
and Iranian oil, which along with lower output affected global supply of
heavy crude, contributed to driving oil prices up more than 20% last
year. But prices are expected to remain rangebound this year as U.S.
supplies have swelled.
OPEC-member Venezuela produced 1.01
million bpd of crude from January through November, according to
official numbers. The collapse in output under President Nicolas Maduro
has dragged what was once Latin America’s wealthiest nation into an
economic tailspin.
Analysts monitoring Venezuela forecast a
further decline in crude production this year due to the combination of
sanctions and lack of investment and staff. Market intelligence firm
Kpler expects Venezuela’s production to average 600,000-800,000 bpd in
2020, said its global energy economist, Reid I’Anson.
Analysts said it was hard to predict how sharply exports would fall this year.
“Washington
wants more sanctions but PDVSA’s customers are looking for formulas to
continue buying,” said Francisco Monaldi, of Rice University’s Baker
Institute, who forecasts output will fall this year at least at the same
rate as the years preceding sanctions.
“The main questions are
how much the United States will enforce sanctions on Venezuela? Is
Washington ready to act against PDVSA’s partners and customers?,”
Monaldi added.
ASIA GROWS IN IMPORTANCE
A
frozen trade relationship with the United States allowed Asia in 2019
to strengthen its position as the main destination for PDVSA’s oil with
China, India, Malaysia, Japan and Singapore receiving cargoes, sometimes
only for blending and transferring.
Venezuela’s oil shipments to Asia averaged 647,000 bpd, or 65% of total exports in 2019.
India
was the second-largest receiver of Venezuela oil last year with 217,739
bpd. Refining firm Reliance Industries suspended direct purchases from
PDVSA in the second quarter, but resumed them later in 2019 after
reaching a new swap deal allowing PDVSA to receive fuel cargoes in
exchange.
Europe was the third-largest destination for
Venezuelan oil, also through swaps allowed under U.S. sanctions.
European refiners, mainly Spain’s Repsol, received an average of 118,980
bpd last year, according to the data.
Cuba was fourth with
70,359 bpd, a number below the average of recent years, but high
considering that other Caribbean nations stopped receiving Venezuelan
oil even before sanctions hit, due to PDVSA’s declining output.
Former
PDVSA executives and union leaders attribute the slump in oil
production to a lack of capital and a recent exodus of about 30,000
workers, around a quarter of total staff reported in 2016, the last year
the firm published its annual report.
PDVSA and its
joint ventures also struggled to export oil that had accumulated in
storage tanks amid a shrinking portfolio of customers due to the
sanctions announced by Washington a year ago to oust Maduro.
The
mounting stocks forced the firm to cut output while converting oil
upgraders into blending stations designed for producing the crude grades
demanded by Asian clients.
Venezuela, which has the world’s
largest crude reserves, imported an average of 155,674 bpd of fuel and
diluent naphtha in 2019, in line with recent years but too little to
cover the gap left by PDVSA’s very low domestic refining, resulting in
intermittent shortages of motor fuel during the year.
Reporting
by Marianna Parraga in Mexico City, with additional reporting my
Mircely Guanipa in Punto Fijo, Venezuela; Editing by Daniel Flynn, David
Gregorio and Dan Grebler
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