Anonymous ID: 5f9b3e Oct. 19, 2023, 8:11 p.m. No.19767724   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8084 >>8237 >>8295 >>8386 >>8509

Venezuela Pursuing Former Oil Clients After U.S. Lifts Sanctions

By Marianna Parraga October 19, 2023

 

HOUSTON, Oct 19 (Reuters) – Venezuelan state-run oil company PDVSA has begun contacting customers with crude supply contracts amid the temporary lifting of U.S. sanctions, two people familiar to the matter said on Thursday, moving to resume cash sales to global refiners.

 

The U.S. on Wednesday lifted most restrictions on Venezuela for six months for producing, selling and exporting oil to its chosen markets. The broad relaxation of sanctions imposed since 2019 following an election that Washington considered a sham will allow some Venezuelan crude to flow to customers previously barred from transactions.

 

The license, issued by the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), aims to encourage a fair presidential election in Venezuela next year. But it is not expected to significantly boost Venezuela’s deteriorated oil production or immediately lead to stronger exports.

 

PDVSA’s trading division has lost many of its skilled staff with oil traders departing due to low salaries. That loss of experience means new negotiations could take time, or produce few new export deals in the six months of the license, according to the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

 

Oil output in Venezuela, which boasts of the largest crude reserves worldwide, now averages 780,000 barrels per day (bpd) and the license changes could help increase PDVSA’s cash flow by at least reducing the pool of middlemen selling its oil at a discount to customers, mostly in Asia.

 

“The OFAC has issued an unprecedented general license that suspends the broad siege imposed to PDVSA,” the company’s CEO and Oil Minister Pedro Tellechea said on social media.

 

Venezuela can now receive direct payments for goods or services under the license issued by OFAC, which oversees American sanctions.

 

The payment restrictions had reduced sale proceeds to PDVSA and its joint ventures, which were authorized only to deliver cargoes to repay debt, while cash moving to Venezuela was barred. Not all U.S. sanctions on PDVSA were lifted.

 

PDVSA’s earnings have been heavily curtailed by sanctions in the past four years. As its traditional customers were banned from doing business with it, the company had to sell its oil to an ever-changing group of middlemen willing to trade cargoes for large price discounts.

 

Since November, when Washington authorized Chevron to expand its joint ventures with PDVSA and export Venezuelan crude to the U.S., that agreement and a few others provided PDVSA’s only access to Western markets.

 

Those agreements, however, are limited to debt repayment deals, so little cash is reaching PDVSA’s coffers, constraining its ability to expand oil production and exports.

 

“The biggest short-term benefit, in an election year, is to sell oil at a full price to its most profitable market, the United States,” Francisco Monaldi, a Latin American energy market expert at Rice University’s Baker Institute, wrote on social media.

 

“Even in case sanctions are reinstated, the money brought in and the limited additional production will be a ‘bird in hand,'” for Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s administration, Monaldi added.

 

FROM CHINA TO EUROPE

A delegation led by Maduro traveled to China in September to renew trade and investments. Among proposals discussed by both government and state companies was the reactivation of Venezuela’s debt payments with oil to China, which largely remain under a grace period, and the expansion of joint oil ventures in the country, according to separate sources close to the talks.

 

China is Venezuela’s main oil export market, receiving some 430,000 bpd of crude and fuel this year, according to tanker tracking data. Before the sanctions, India and the U.S. were other top destinations.

 

PDVSA’s largest customers, state-run CNPC and PetroChina 601857.SS through wide oil-for-debt deals, have not imported Venezuelan oil since the U.S. imposed secondary sanctions in 2020, so small refiners in China have been taking theVenezuelan cargoes instead.

 

Before sanctions, PDVSA also had oil supply contracts with U.S. oil refiners including its Houston-based subsidiary Citgo Petroleum, Valero Energy and PBF Energy; India’s Reliance Industries and Nayara Energy; and European firms such as Italy’s Eni and Spain’s Repsol.

 

It was not immediately clear which of those oil supply contracts remain unexpired and could be quickly renewed.

 

PDVSA and Venezuela’s oil ministry did not immediately reply to requests for comment.

 

President Joe Biden’s administration this week highlighted that both the election terms and a series of side agreements between Maduro, the country’s political opposition and Washington must be fulfilled to keep the licenses active.

 

The U.S. gave Venezuela until the end of November to withdraw bans on opposition candidates who would run for president, and a group of political prisoners must be released. The first release of detainees took place overnight.

 

https://gcaptain.com/venezuela-pursuing-former-oil-clients-after-u-s-lifts-sanctions/

Anonymous ID: 5f9b3e Oct. 19, 2023, 8:16 p.m. No.19767748   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Offshore Wind Developers Likely to Cancel Some Contracts After NY Decision

By Scott DiSavino October 19, 2023

 

Oct 19 (Reuters) – Developers in the U.S. offshore wind industry will likely cancel some power sales contracts in New York after the state last week denied passing on more of the costs to consumers, but major projects off Massachusetts and Rhode Island are set to start up later this year.

 

Several states and U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration consider offshore wind to be a key part of their plans to transition away from fossil fuels for energy, create jobs and reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

 

Last week, New York utility regulators dealt the industry a severe blow by denying requests to increase the amount of money New Yorkers would have to pay under existing contracts for power to be produced at fouroffshore wind projects under development.

 

The wind developers, including units of European energy companies Orsted, Equinor and BP, requested those increases to cover rising labor and equipment costs due to soaring inflation and higher financing costs from interest rate hikes.

 

The companies said they are reviewing the New York decision before taking next steps on their projects, including Orsted’s 924-megawatt (MW) Sunrise Wind, and Equinor/BP’s 816-MW Empire Wind 1, 1,260-MW Empire Wind 2 and 1,230-MW Beacon Wind.

 

“Contract disputes are near-term risks for some projects and state renewable energy goals,” Timothy Fox, VP at research firm ClearView Energy Partners, told Reuters. “In the long run, however, we still think offshore wind will be a major producer of power … it’s just on a longer and flatter trajectory than first envisioned by the states and the Biden administration.”

 

Future offshore wind bids are expected to incorporate climbing costs for projects, said Eli Rubin, senior energy analyst at energy consulting firm EBW Analytics Group.

 

“States will likely have to either approve sharply higher consumer rates or find another pathway toward a low-carbon future,” Rubin said.

 

PROJECTS MOVING FORWARD

Despite the troubles in New York, other U.S. projects were still moving ahead, some of which started construction before the U.S. Federal Reserve started raising interest rates to fight inflation over a year ago.

 

U.S. energy company Avangrid’s 806-MW Vineyard Wind 1 off Massachusetts and Danish energy firm Orsted’s 130-MW South Fork off Rhode Island and Massachusetts were on track to produce first power in late 2023.

 

Orsted, the world’s biggest offshore wind company, said it has also started onshore construction at its 704-MW Revolution Wind off Rhode Island and Massachusetts and the 1,100-MW Ocean Wind 1 off New Jersey. Both projects are expected to produce their first power in 2025.

 

In Virginia, U.S. energy company Dominion Energy said its roughly $10 billion, 2,587-MW Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project remained on budget and on track to start offshore construction in May 2024 with first power expected in the second half of 2025 and completion in late 2026.

 

https://gcaptain.com/offshore-wind-developers-likely-to-cancel-some-contracts-after-ny-decision/

Anonymous ID: 5f9b3e Oct. 19, 2023, 11:39 p.m. No.19768518   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8525

>>19768503

 

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