Latest News

Tankertrackers.com reports that about a dozen oil tankers loaded with crude left Venezuela in darkness mode.

Monitoring service TankerTrackers.com reported that about a dozen oil tankers carrying Venezuelan crude or?fuel left the country's waterways in the dark mode. This was despite the strict U.S. blockade, which had been imposed after intense pressure grew until the capture and deposition of Nicolas Maduro.

All of the vessels identified as departing are subject to U.S. Sanctions. Separately, a group of ships also subject to'sanctions' left the country empty in recent days after completing domestic transportation or discharging imported goods.

The departures may be a relief to Venezuela's PDVSA state-owned oil company, which had built up a large stock of floating storage during the U.S. Blockade that began last month and brought the country's exports to a halt.

Venezuela's primary source of revenue is oil exports. The interim government led by vice president Delcy Rodriquez, who is also the oil minister, will need to use the revenue to finance expenditures and ensure domestic stability.

After identifying the vessels using satellite images, TankerTrackers.com reported that at least four of these departed oil tankers had?left Venezuelan water through a northerly route after stopping briefly near the country's border.

Sources with a knowledge of the paperwork for departures said that four supertankers were cleared to leave Venezuelan waters in dark mode by Venezuelan authorities in recent days.

It wasn't immediately clear if these departures were in defiance of the U.S. sanctions. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that an "oil boycott" was in place against Venezuela, but that it would continue to be enforced under a transition. Reporting by

(source: Reuters)