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Data and sources say that a vessel chartered by Chevron will complete the oil cargo return to Venezuela.

According to shipping data and an anonymous source, a vessel chartered by Chevron that was carrying 500,000 barrels Venezuelan crude is now about to discharge the cargo in a Venezuelan harbor, after the state company PDVSA ordered the crude to be returned amid payment uncertainty due to U.S. sanction. As part of the winding down of Chevron's U.S. licence through May 27, at least nine tankers Chevron chartered for the purpose of transporting Venezuelan crude oil to the U.S. are now stuck in the Caribbean Sea awaiting directions. PDVSA ordered last week that two cargoes be returned, and cancelled loading permits for others.

LSEG shipping data revealed that the Bahamas-flagged vessel Carina Voyager managed by a Chevron division began discharging Saturday at PDVSA’s Jose port, the cargo originally intended for export.

A source with knowledge of PDVSA operations confirmed that the tanker was scheduled to complete the oil return by Monday. The source also said that Chevron's second cargo, which will be returned on the Marshall Islands flagged tanker Dubai Attraction in the coming days, will discharge around 300,000 barrels (heavy crude) Boscan at PDVSA Amuay Terminal after the U.S. firm has completed a port inspection.

On Friday, Venezuela's Vice-President Delcy Rodriguez - who is also OPEC's Oil Minister – blamed U.S. sanctions for the problem, claiming they prevented Chevron paying for the oil.

Rodriguez posted on social media that Chevron had returned crude cargoes to PDVSA because of the economic warfare initiated by the U.S. Government against oil companies. This crude is sold on the international market."

Chevron didn't immediately respond to a comment request.

The U.S. Treasury Department issued a license to Chevron in 2022 to operate in Venezuela. President Donald Trump revoked that license in March, giving the company until May to cease operations and stop oil exports.

Other partners of PDVSA including Eni Repsol Maurel & Prom Reliance Industries and others were given the same deadline to wind down oil shipments bound for Europe or Asia.

(source: Reuters)