Chevron aims to boost Venezuela oil output to accelerate debt recovery
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[May 10, 2023] By
Marianna Parraga and Deisy Buitrago
HOUSTON/CARACAS (Reuters) - Chevron Corp's renewed oil operations in
Venezuela begin a new phase next month that will boost production with
the goal of accelerating a plan to recover all of the $3 billion of debt
owed by the OPEC member by the end of 2025, four people close to the
matter said.
Washington in November issued a six-month, automatically renewing
license to the U.S. oil company to revive largely dormant operations in
Venezuela and resume crude exports to the U.S. under an exemption to
sanctions on the South American country.
To back up its license application, Chevron last year signed an
oil-for-debt swap with Venezuela's state-run PDVSA.
Under the deal, Chevron aims to recover some $750 million in unpaid
debts and dividends by year-end, and all $3 billion outstanding by the
end of 2025, one of the people said. So far, it has recovered some $220
million, the source said.
The plan shows both Chevron and PDVSA are getting what they wanted from
the agreement: Venezuelan oil flowing to the U.S. and the OPEC nation
getting royalties, worker benefits and a chance for future profits.
Chevron this year has reactivated crude output at its four joint
ventures with PDVSA, exported an average 102,500 barrels per day (bpd),
taken a role in procuring supplies and appointed new managers to the
ventures' boards.
The initial exports have rapidly drained the ventures' oil inventories,
which had built up for years. Chevron plans to continue pushing up heavy
crude output mainly at oilfields in eastern and western Venezuela
belonging to its Petropiar and Petroboscan projects, according to the
sources.
MORE EFFICIENT OPERATIONS
In the second phase, Chevron plans to drive crude production to up to
160,000 bpd this year and about 200,000 bpd in 2024, one of the people
said.
To optimize exports, the oil major has proposed to help Venezuela
prepare a study on dredging Lake Maracaibo's navigation channel, which
would let it load larger tankers, three of the people said.
Chevron also has asked PDVSA to assign it dedicated storage tanks for
its joint ventures to improve handling of imported diluents and crude
from the Orinoco Belt, Venezuela's largest producing region.
To motivate their joint venture workers, Chevron and PDVSA have agreed
to pay bonuses for food and personal care to the staff, and improve
their health insurance coverage, they added.
[to top of second column] |
Oil tanker Kerala, chartered by Chevron,
is loaded in the Bajo Grande oil terminal at Maracaibo Lake, in the
municipality of San Francisco, Venezuela, January 5, 2023.
REUTERS/Isaac Urrutia/File Photo
Venezuela's oil ministry and PDVSA did not reply to a request for
comment. Chevron said it continues to conduct business "in
compliance with all laws and regulations, as well as the sanctions
framework provided by the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control."
More robust work and investment plans will have to wait, according
to the sources.
At the Petropiar joint venture, urgent repairs are needed to its
crude upgrader, which converts the Orinoco heavy crude into
exportable grades. But major maintenance at the facility and a
long-delayed new drilling plan are not expected in the short term,
the people said.
"They will continue doing well workover only," one person said.
Chevron CEO Michael Wirth last month said the company's output in
Venezuela was expected to reach 150,000 bpd this year without
significant new investment and under existing license terms.
GOLDEN TICKET
Chevron's license broke a four-year U.S. prohibition on Venezuelan
oil exports to the United States designed to oust President Nicolas
Maduro.
Even though the license bans any cash payments to Maduro's
administration, it has helped Venezuela stabilize its currency by
injecting U.S. dollars into its economy and benefited U.S. Gulf
Coast refiners receiving the oil.
According to the oil-for-debt swap's terms, sales proceeds since
January are going to the ventures' foreign bank accounts, Reuters
has learned.
From there, one portion goes to debt repayment, a second to taxes
and royalties through foreign currency exchange transactions by
banks in Venezuela, and a third covers operational expenses, the
sources said.
Because the license automatically renews every month for six more
months, Chevron has dealt with fewer policy changes compared with
the system it had until 2020, which required a full renewal of terms
at every license's expiration.
The license will keep renewing unless the U.S. decides to rescind it
or changes its terms, sources in Washington, Houston and Caracas
said.
(Reporting by Marianna Parraga in Houston and Deisy Buitrago in
Caracas. Additional reporting by Matt Spetalnick in Washington and
Sabrina Valle in Houston; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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