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US-authorized buyers Venezuelan oil complete transaction as licenses expire

Shipping data and documents viewed on Wednesday show that buyers of Venezuelan crude oil who were granted licenses or authorizations by Washington have finished loading and departed their vessels as the period given to Washington for winding down transactions ended this week.

As part of Trump's tougher stance against Venezuela, the U.S. Treasury Department and State Department have given companies like Chevron and Repsol until the 27th of May to receive cargoes from Venezuelan crude oil, fuel, and byproducts. Authorizations granted over the past few years were revoked back in March.

The data revealed that a recent large swap between Venezuelan state company PDVSA and M&P, and commodities firm Vitol, was completed. Naphtha supplies were discharged at PDVSA’s Jose port, and vessels carrying Venezuelan crude oil set sail for the U.S.

In recent days, other customers have also received their final cargoes before the deadline.

PDVSA canceled in April cargoes that were scheduled to be delivered to one of its major joint-venture partners Chevron. The company cited payment uncertainty related to U.S. sanction, which shortened the deadline for completing these transactions.

The company confirmed that Chevron’s license to operate in Venezuela expired on Tuesday. Sources say that the U.S. oil producer was given guidelines by the Trump administration to allow it to maintain its stakes, assets, and staff in Venezuela.

PDVSA Vitol M&P Chevron and PDVSA did not respond to comments immediately.

The data and documents show that as buyers completed and ended deals, crude sales to U.S. authorized companies have decreased since last month. This has been partially offset by a rise in fuel and oil deliveries to lesser-known intermediaries who distribute Venezuelan cargoes to Asia.

Analysts predict that without the licenses Venezuelan oil production and exports will decline by 15-30% at the end of the year. This is after a slow recovery which had brought the average crude production to 1 million barrels per daily (bpd).

The government of Nicolas Maduro has rejected the sanctions. Officials claim that they are an "economic warfare." Reporting by Staff; Editing by Alistair Bell

(source: Reuters)