Latest News

Venezuelan oil exports rose sharply under US control in January, according to data

Shipping data shows that Venezuelan oil exports increased to 800,000 barrels a day (bpd), from 498,000 in December. This was after the U.S. captured Nicolas Maduro, and the end of a blockade on oil, which allowed traders to carry the majority of exports.

Washington imposed a crude oil embargo against the U.S. sanctioned country to put pressure on Maduro in December and seized 7 tankers.

The blockade caused the accumulation of 40 million barrels crude oil and fuel in tanks and vessels onshore that couldn't be exported, forcing Venezuela's state energy company PDVSA (the Venezuelan government-owned energy company) to reduce output in early January.

The data from tanker movements shows that since the U.S. Treasury Department granted the first licenses in January to traders Trafigura & Vitol to export the stocks, oil production and processing?and shipments have increased.

The volume of crude oil and fuel exported in January was similar to the average of 847,000 barrels per day (bpd) last year. PDVSA and its partners would need to accelerate exports in order to remove millions of barrels from inventories.

The data showed that January's exports were slightly less than the 867,000 Bpd shipped during the same month in 2025.

Treasury Department issued a license last week authorizing businesses between U.S. firms and PDVSA for the export, storage, transport, and refinement of Venezuelan oil. This is another step in untangling exports. PDVSA partners including Chevron are still waiting on individual licenses for expansion.

Chevron shipped 220,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Venezuelan crude to the United States, up from 99,000 barrels per day the month before.

China, the number one destination for Venezuelan oil exports until December, receiving more than 70% of all exports, received 156,000 barrels per day last month. No oil was exported to Cuba, a political ally.

The data shows that Vitol, Trafigura and other companies exported 12 million barrels (or 392,000 bpd) of Venezuelan crude oil and fuel under U.S. licensing in January. These were mainly shipped to storage terminals in the Caribbean from where they then began to export and market cargoes to clients in the U.S.A., Europe, and India.

Caracas and Washington agreed to a $2 billion deal for the supply of oil, but between 18 and 38 million barrels are still to be shipped. The proceeds will go to a U.S. supervised fund.

Venezuela exported its first cargo liquefied petrol gas (LPG), in nearly three years, on Sunday. The vessel Chrysopigi lady, chartered by Trafigura, left the Jose port. According to shipping data, the South American nation used to export small quantities of LPG into Cuba.

In January, Chevron and Vitol delivered heavy naphtha to PDVSA as well as its joint ventures. These imports are crucial to dilute Venezuelan extra-heavy crude and ensure the production of exportable grades.

(source: Reuters)