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Sources say Venezuela's state oil company resumed cargo deliveries following cyberattack

According to sources and the state-run PDVSA, Venezuelan oil company resumed oil cargo deliveries on Wednesday at its terminals after a cyberattack affected their centralized administrative system.

Sources close to the operations of PDVSA said that the company, which was dealing with the U.S. blockade on Tuesday against all sanctioned oil tankers attempting to enter or leave Venezuelan waters and approaching, had been able to isolate refineries, oilfields, ports, and other facilities to resume working. According to a source at the state-run oil company, the ransomware was detected days earlier and the antivirus software used to try and fix it affected the entire administrative system. A ransomware attack encrypts the victim's files and locks their computer, causing major disruptions. Sources said that workers at terminals now manually record deliveries in order to prevent a longer suspension. In a Wednesday statement, PDVSA stated that its tanker fleet is navigating normally and oil imports and exports are back to normal. According to one source and shipping data, PDVSA's partner in the joint venture Chevron loaded two crude cargoes for the U.S. on Wednesday.

It's unclear how U.S. president Donald Trump will enforce his blockade of sanctioned vessels and if he will use the U.S. Coast Guard for interdiction. Last week, the U.S. seized a Supertanker near Venezuela.

The Trump administration has sent thousands of troops as well as nearly a dozen ships to the area.

Venezuela's response to Trump's "grotesque threats" was made in a later statement on Tuesday evening, claiming that he violated international law, the free trade and the right to free navigation.

According to a statement shared by Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez who is also Venezuelan oil minister, the ambassador of Venezuela to the United Nations would?denounce Trump’s threat there.

Exports are drying up since the U.S. took over the large crude carrier Skipper, last week. Only tankers chartered by Chevron, and operating under U.S. authorization have sailed without delay.

A supertanker that was not sanctioned set sail in "dark mode" or with its signal off this week, after waiting days for it to depart, carrying 1.8 millions barrels of heavy oil, according to an internal PDVSA document and monitoring data.

The PDVSA is still stuck with more than 9 million barrels of Venezuelan crude oil in Venezuelan waters. Customers and shippers are demanding price discounts and contract modifications from the company.

According to the data available on the TankerTrackers.com website, at least half a dozen oil tankers have turned back since last week in order to avoid approaching the Caribbean Sea which is heavily patrolled and manned by U.S. vessels.

In addition, the rising tensions between Venezuela and the United States have affected Venezuela's imports heavy naphtha needed to dilute it extra-heavy crude oil production. The data shows that most tankers delivering Russian naphtha to Venezuela arrived and discharging since last month. However, some have returned. The data showed that most tankers carrying Russian naphtha for Venezuela have arrived and discharged since last month, but others have turned back.

(source: Reuters)