Stabroek News

Iran fuel shipment nears Venezuelan shores, Maduro thanks Tehran

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CARACAS, (Reuters) - The lead vessel of a five-tanker flotilla carrying fuel supplied by Iran to gasoline-thirsty Venezuela neared one of state-run PDVSA’s ports as President Nicolas Maduro thanked Tehran yesterday.

Iran is providing Venezuela with 1.53 million barrels of gasoline and components in a move criticized by U.S. authoritie­s as both nations are under Washington’s sanctions, according to the government­s, sources and calculatio­ns by TankerTrac­kers.com.

Tanker Fortune was due to arrive at PDVSA’s El Palito port, close to the capital Caracas, according to a company source and Refinitiv Eikon data showing its trajectory. A second vessel, the Forest, entered the Caribbean Sea on Saturday. The three remaining vessels were crossing the Atlantic.

PDVSA did not reply to a request for comment on the exact content of the cargoes or plans for more imports from Iran.

“Venezuela and Iran both want peace, and we have the right to trade freely,” Maduro said in a state television address. Maduro referred to the two countries as “revolution­ary peoples who will never kneel down before the North American empire.”

The Trump administra­tion said earlier this month it was considerin­g “measures” to take in response to the shipments, without providing specifics.

Venezuela’s refining network has been operating this year at about 10% of its 1.3 million-barrel-per-day capacity, forcing it to rely on imports. U.S. sanctions limit the sources and types of fuel it can receive.

Maduro said the tankers were bringing gasoline and inputs to its refineries to produce gasoline.

Washington has steadily hardened sanctions on PDVSA as part of its effort to oust Maduro, a socialist who has overseen a six-year economic collapse and is accused by opponents of rigging his 2018 re-election vote.

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