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Chevron exports are flowing, despite Venezuelan oil deliveries to Asia being at a standstill.

Shipping data shows that Venezuela's main oil port on Tuesday became the fifth day without delivering crude to the state-run PDVSA customers in Asia – the OPEC country's major buyers – as the U.S. pressed the nation with an oil embargo.

Chevron, the main joint venture partner of PDVSA, resumed Monday exports of Venezuelan crude oil to the U.S., after a four day pause. It also called its?workers overseas back to their Venezuela offices, as flights into?the country re-started. In recent weeks, the U.S. company has become 'the only firm fluidly exporting Venezuelan crude.

In early January, a dozen vessels under sanctions which had been loaded in December left Venezuelan waters with 12 million barrels worth of fuel and crude oil bound for China. The vessels left in "dark mode" or without transponders, breaking the U.S. blockade that had been in place since last month.

Washington hasn't clarified whether it authorized?these departures. PDVSA didn't immediately respond to a comment request.

A halt in oil exports to Asia may force PDVSA to intensify production cuts that it has already begun recently due to an excess of crude and residual fuel stocks. Reporting by Marianna Paraga; Editing and proofreading by Julia Symmes Cobb

(source: Reuters)