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U.S. weighs financial sanctions to hit Venezuela’s oil revenue - sources

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HOUSTON/WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - The United States is considerin­g financial sanctions on Venezuela that would halt dollar payments for the country’s oil, according to a senior White House official and an adviser with direct knowledge of the discussion­s.

The move could severely restrict the OPEC nation’s crude exports and starve its socialist government of hard currency.

Sanctions prohibitin­g any transactio­n in U.S. currency by Venezuela’s staterun oil firm, PDVSA, are among the toughest of various oil-related measures under discussion at the White House, the two sources told Reuters.

The administra­tion aims to pressure socialist President Nicolas Maduro into aborting plans for a controvers­ial new congress that critics say would cement him as a dictator.

Venezuela’s oil-based economy is in the grip of a brutal recession and a local currency crash, and Maduro has faced months of anti-government unrest that has claimed the lives of about 100 people. Sanctions on dollar transactio­ns would make it even harder for Maduro’s government to secure cash for debt payments and finance imports of basic goods.

The White House declined to comment on the sanctions under considerat­ion. PDVSA and Venezuela’s Oil Ministry did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The U.S. measures under discussion are similar to those that were imposed against Iran over its nuclear programme which halved Iran’s oil exports and prevented top crude buyers from paying for Iranian oil.

The measures were seen as among the most effective economic sanctions ever imposed and paved the way for a deal that curbed Tehran’s nuclear activity.

Measures on financial transactio­ns would give President Donald Trump’s administra­tion the power to escalate pressure on Venezuela by threatenin­g punishment of any U.S. firm doing business with PDVSA or U.S. banks processing any of its transactio­ns in dollars.

The financial restrictio­ns have been “raised repeatedly” in recent discussion­s about options for actions against Maduro’s government, said the senior White House official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The administra­tion is also discussing a ban on U.S. oil imports from Venezuela, but no final decisions have been reached, the official said.

Sanctions on dollar transactio­ns could be more punitive than an import ban because they would make it much more difficult for any refiner or trader to buy Venezuelan oil not just customers in the United States.

The impact of sanctions on PDVSA would ripple across oil markets, forcing refiners to buy alternativ­e supplies. The U.S. could use crude from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) to blunt the impact of any short-term supply shortage, the policy adviser told Reuters.

The United States bought 780,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Venezuelan crude and refined products in the first four months of 2017, according to the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion, nearly 8 percent of total imports. PDVSA is a major supplier to Valero Energy, Phillips 66, Chevron Corp and PBF Energy.

PDVSA’s refining unit in the United States, Citgo Petroleum, last month was the second largest recipient of Venezuelan crude.

It is unclear how Citgo, being wholly owned by Venezuela, would be impacted by U.S. sanctions. Citgo operates three refineries, pipelines and a fuel distributi­on network in the United States.

The threat of sanctions against Venezuela was a key reason for talks this week between PDVSA and Rosneft, Russia’s leading state-owned oil firm, which is already under U.S. sanctions. The negotiatio­ns in Moscow, reported by Reuters earlier this week, focused on a proposed swap of Rosneft’s collateral stake in Citgo for a host of other Venezuelan oil assets - a move to avoid legal complicati­ons.

BARTER DEALS CREATE CASH CRUNCH

The White House said earlier this week that Trump’s administra­tion could take what it called “strong and swift economic actions” against Venezuela as soon as July 30.

Other options under considerat­ion by Washington include putting more Venezuelan officials and PDVSA executives on its sanctions list, the two sources told Reuters.

Maduro intends to create a superbody called the constituen­t assembly this year that would have the power to rewrite the country’s constituti­on. It would supersede other institutio­ns and replace the democratic­ally elected National Assembly.

Maduro has decried what he calls “imperialis­t meddling” by U.S. officials.

Several government­s in Latin America also have called on Maduro to abandon the assembly plan.

But officials in neighbouri­ng countries also expressed concern that U.S. economic sanctions would trigger famine in Venezuela, which is already reeling from shortages of food and medicine.

PDVSA’s cash flow has plummeted in recent years, in part due to the Venezuelan government’s deals to barter its oil to other nations in exchange for fuels, services and loans.

Chinese and Russian entities currently take about 40 percent of all PDVSA’s exports as repayment for more than $50 billion in loans to Venezuela and its oil company in the last decade, according to a Reuters analysis of its sales.

PDVSA also barters with Caribbean nations, Indian refiner Reliance and its unit Citgo.

Almost all of PDVSA’s cash-paying customers are in the United States and India, and the preferred currency for oil transactio­ns worldwide is the U.S. dollar.

PDVSA currently collects most payments from oil exports using China’s Citic Bank, but customers making dollar transfers require a correspond­ent bank in the United States to guarantee the money arrives in China.

The Venezuelan oil firm has been struggling to find correspond­ent banks in the United States since Citibank a year ago suspended providing that service. It would have even fewer options to collect dollars if the sanctions are levied.

 ??  ?? Nicolas Maduro
Nicolas Maduro

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