Latest Rosneft sanctions ratchet up U.S. threats for
foreign firms dealing with Venezuela
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[February 20, 2020] By
Luc Cohen
CARACAS (Reuters) - Washington's move this
week to sanction a trading unit of Russian oil giant Rosneft for its
ties with Venezuela's state-run PDVSA escalated threats facing non-U.S.
firms and will likely spur "overcompliance" by companies, analysts and
industry sources said.
The U.S. government on Tuesday blacklisted Rosneft Trading, SA, the
Geneva-based trading arm of Rosneft <ROSN.MM> that has emerged as one of
PDVSA's main intermediaries since previous rounds of sanctions targeted
the Venezuelan company last year, in an effort to oust President Nicolas
Maduro.
The measure explicitly prohibited U.S. companies from dealing with
Rosneft Trading after a three-month wind-down period. But in a Q&A
published alongside the new measure, the Treasury Department's Office of
Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) said "non U.S. persons" unable to wind
down dealings with the company by May 20 "may seek guidance from OFAC."

"It's the first clear, written indication that non-U.S. third parties
should be on guard, because after May 20 they could be targeted," said
one Venezuelan oil industry source, who spoke on the condition of
anonymity.
A separate OFAC move last August, which threatened sanctions against
anyone doing business with Venezuela, halted a long-standing trade
relationship between PDVSA and Chinese companies CNPC and PetroChina Co
<601857.SS>, limiting their business relationship to joint production in
Venezuelan oilfields.
The Kremlin on Tuesday said the new U.S. sanctions were illegal and
would not affect Moscow's ties with Caracas. Rosneft said Washington had
"repeatedly" said its activities in Venezuela did not violate the
restrictions, and that the company would "consider its options for legal
protection."
But OFAC's measures could dissuade Rosneft Trading's other customers
from dealing with the unit while complicating access to financing, as
companies seek to avoid U.S. scrutiny, said Peter Harrell, a fellow at
the Center for a New American Security and a former State Department
official focusing on sanctions.
"Whether it's for Rosneft Trading in this regards, now, or for companies
that deal with Rosneft Trading throughout the world, they are on notice
that they are all susceptible to sanctions," a senior U.S.
administration official told reporters on Tuesday.
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The Rosneft logo is pictured on a safety helmet in Vung Tau, Vietnam
April 27, 2018. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov

Already, global commodity trader Trafigura Group has said it would comply with
U.S. sanctions on Rosneft Trading.
India's Reliance Industries <RELI.NS>, the second largest buyer of Venezuelan
crude, said it would continue talks with Washington to ensure its purchases were
compliant with sanctions. Another Indian customer, Nayara Energy, said it
complies with applicable sanctions.
'ALTERNATIVE PATHS'
To be sure, Rosneft could try to use other, non-sanctioned entities to continue
its dealings with Venezuela. TNK Trading International, another Rosneft
subsidiary, also regularly lifts crude directly from Venezuelan ports, according
to internal PDVSA documents seen by Reuters.
"Should Moscow aim to continue channeling Venezuelan crude exports, it will find
alternative paths to circumvent today's U.S. sanctions," Andrew Bishop of Signum
Global Advisors wrote in a note to clients on Monday.
The sanction on Rosneft Trading also comes less than a month after OFAC renewed
a license allowing U.S. oil major Chevron Corp <CVX.N> to continue operating in
Venezuela, where it has joint ventures with PDVSA and recently resumed direct
crude exports. Moscow has branded that unfair competition.
U.S. special representative for Venezuela Elliott Abrams said on Tuesday that
Spanish oil company Repsol, another PDVSA customer, would have to change its
activities "as we move forward." Repsol declined to comment.
"The U.S. will likely continue to try to scare non Western companies from
backing the Maduro regime. But it is highly unlikely the U.S. will force Western
companies, certainly not U.S. companies, out of Venezuela's oil patch," said
Raul Gallegos, Andean director for consultancy Control Risks.

"Russia and [President Vladimir] Putin will continue to support the Venezuelan
regime, aside from what measures Rosneft may take to protect its commercial
interests elsewhere," he said.
(Reporting by Luc Cohen; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Tom Brown)
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