Houston Chronicle Sunday

Chevron looks to revamp Venezuela oil pact to lift output

- By Fabiola Zerpa and Kevin Crowley

Chevron Corp. wants more control over the oil it produces in Venezuela, a move that would help the driller boost output and recover debt if the U.S. eases sanctions amid a global fuel crunch.

The energy giant is seeking to take charge of production, shipment and sales of its Venezuelan crude, according to people familiar with the matter. Javier La Rosa, president of Chevron’s operations in the Latin American country, and Venezuela Oil Minister Tareck El Aissami have been meeting since late May to negotiate a new contract, the people said.

The proposal would mark a major shift as Chevron would take the lead in all facets of its operations in joint ventures with state energy company Petroleos de Venezuela SA, according to the people. Under the proposed arrangemen­t, California-based Chevron would negotiate with suppliers and importers and handle financing, sending the final payment to PDVSA through the central bank, they said.

El Aissami and a representa­tive of Venezuela’s oil ministry didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. Ray Fohr, a Chevron spokesman, said the company doesn’t comment on rumors or speculatio­n and continues to conduct its businesses in compliance with the sanctions framework provided by the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control.

“We are a constructi­ve presence in Venezuela, where we have dedicated investment­s and a large workforce who are dependent on our presence,” Fohr said. “We remain committed to the safety and wellbeing of our employees and their families, the integrity of our joint venture assets, and the company’s social and humanitari­an programs during these challengin­g times.”

Revamping the contract would leave Chevron primed to boost production quickly if the U.S. eases sanctions against Venezuelan oil, and would allow it to recover money it’s owed by PDVSA. If Chevron reaches a deal with Venezuela and the Biden administra­tion lifts sanctions, the U.S. driller could increase the amount it pumps to around 200,000 barrels a day in six months from 150,000 currently, according to one of the people. The oil giant’s Pascagoula refinery in Mississipp­i was engineered to run on heavy crude from Venezuela.

Chevron’s move comes as the global energy crisis adds momentum to the company’s push to boost output in Venezuela, where it began exploring for oil about a century ago. While U.S. retail gasoline prices have eased from recent records, President Joe Biden remains under pressure to relieve pain at the pump and offset the impact of sanctions on Russian supply. The U.S. has already allowed Eni SpA and Repsol SA to import Venezuelan crude and count the cargoes toward PDVSA’s debt to the European energy companies.

In May, the U.S. said it would allow Chevron to negotiate its license with PDVSA and has said it’s willing to ease some sanctions if Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro agrees to political concession­s. So far, the restrictio­ns have remained in place. Chevron and a handful of U.S. oil-service providers can keep a limited presence in the OPEC-member country, but they can’t make any new investment­s nor export Venezuelan crude.

Venezuela sits atop the world’s largest proved crude reserves, but production has tumbled due to years of government mismanagem­ent, a lack of investment and years of sanctions. It pumps around 710,000 barrels a day, compared to more than 3 million at its peak.

The Biden administra­tion has said any lifting of sanctions depends on Maduro restarting political negotiatio­ns with the opposition and making concession­s ahead of 2024 presidenti­al elections. Venezuelan government and opposition representa­tives held preliminar­y meetings in Caracas last week.

Chevron is also trying to determine how much PDVSA owes it for oil sold from their four joint ventures since 2019, when sanctions prevented the U.S. driller from earning revenue from the partnershi­ps.

 ?? Leslie Mazoch/Associated Press file photo ?? Chevron is trying to determine how much PDVSA owes for oil sold from four joint ventures since 2019.
Leslie Mazoch/Associated Press file photo Chevron is trying to determine how much PDVSA owes for oil sold from four joint ventures since 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States