世界石油


(彭博社)“石油业高管纷纷涌向委内瑞拉,以利用美国制裁较轻的机会,尽管世界上最大的石油储备可能会像开放一样迅速关闭。

尽管制裁解除存在不确定性,石油高管仍涌向委内瑞拉 - 石油和天然气 360

资料来源:世界石油

自美国解除对委内瑞拉的限制以来,壳牌公司、雷普索尔公司、匈牙利莫尔尼特公司、瑞典马哈能源公司、特立尼达和多巴哥国家天然气公司和玻利维亚国家天然气公司YPFB等公司已派代表团前往加拉加斯据四位知情人士透露,上个月石油行业的情况有所改善。

知情人士称,这些公司通常要么试图获得石油和天然气田的使用权、重写合同,要么收回旧债务。他们实际上押注美国总统乔·拜登的政府不会兑现其威胁,重新对在委内瑞拉经营的公司实施制裁,这将阻止该党刚刚起步。

华盛顿要求尼科尔·马杜罗总统的政府在 11 月底之前在举行公平选举方面取得重大进展,包括为不合格的候选人制定参加明年投票的程序。马杜罗尚未这样做,这带来了“快速恢复制裁”的风险,这将重新对委内瑞拉石油行业实施严格限制,使外国钻探商几乎不可能在那里作业。

“如果他们不采取商定的步骤,我们将取消我们授予的许可证,”美国负责西半球事务的助理国务卿布莱恩·尼科尔斯本月表示。

然而,美国可能不愿意重新实施控制。委内瑞拉石油行业的复苏有助于抵消去年对俄罗斯实施的制裁对石油市场的影响,而委内瑞拉经济的强劲也有助于遏制移民流向美国

突然的决定知情人士称,最近几周,外国石油高管会见了石油部、国家控股石油公司委内瑞拉国家石油公司 (PDVSA) 以及政府主导的投资促进实体国际投资中心的官员。

拜登政府决定放松管制六个月,允许石油公司在委内瑞拉相对自由地运营,这一决定的范围令许多业内人士感到意外,引发了潜在交易者纷纷涌向加拉加斯。

委内瑞拉与外国和当地公司有 40 多家石油合作伙伴关系,其中一些公司由于商业环境困难而暂停了活动。政府现在寻求用愿意进行新投资和生产的公司来取代这些公司。

政府的目标产量为 1 MMbpd,目前约为 750,000-800,000 桶/日。该国拥有约 300 桶储量,比沙特阿拉伯还要多。

总部位于加拉加斯的咨询公司 Ecoanalitica 负责人 AsdrCobal Oliveros 表示,如果美国在 3 月份许可证到期后将其许可证再延长六个月,该国可能会在明年年底前实现这一目标。

“问题是这种开放是否会持续,”奥利韦罗斯在本月的网络广播中表示。

壳牌拒绝置评。雷普索尔、Mol Nyrt、Maha Energy、特立尼达和多巴哥国家天然气公司以及玻利维亚国家天然气公司 YPFB 没有回复书面评论请求。

委内瑞拉信息部、石油部和国家石油公司没有回复寻求置评的电子邮件。

马杜罗政府和反对党联盟于 10 月在巴巴多斯签署了一项协议,其中包括保证 2024 年举行更公平的总统选举,包括派驻外国观察员和释放政治犯。

 


原文链接/oilandgas360

World Oil


(Bloomberg) – Oil executives are flocking to Venezuela to take advantage of lighter U.S. sanctions, even though there’s a risk that access to the world’s largest oil reserves might snap shut as quickly as it opened.

Oil executives flock to Venezuela despite sanctions relief uncertainty- oil and gas 360

Source: World Oil

Companies including Shell Plc., Repsol SA, Hungary’s Mol Nyrt, Sweden’s Maha Energy AB, the National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago and Bolivia’s state gas company YPFB have sent delegations to Caracas since the U.S. lifted curbs on Venezuela’s oil sector last month, according to four people with knowledge of the situation.

The companies are generally trying either to secure access to oil and gas fields, rewrite contracts or recover old debts, the people said. They are effectively betting that the government of U.S. President Joe Biden won’t follow through on its threat to reimpose sanctions against companies that operate in Venezuela, which would stop the party just as it’s getting started.

Washington gave the government of President Nicolás Maduro until the end of November to make significant advances toward holding fair elections, including defining a process for disqualified candidates to participate in next year’s vote. Maduro has yet to do this, bringing a risk of “snapback sanctions” that would reimpose tight curbs on Venezuela’s oil sector, making it nearly impossible for foreign drillers to operate there.

“If they don’t take the agreed steps, we will remove the licenses we’ve awarded,” U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Brian Nichols said this month.

However, the U.S. may be reluctant to reimpose controls. A revival of Venezuela’s oil sector helps offset the impact on oil markets of sanctions imposed on Russia last year, while a stronger Venezuelan economy also helps curb the flow of migrants to the U.S.

Sudden decision. In recent weeks, foreign oil executives have met officials from the oil ministry, state-controlled oil company Petróleos de Venezuela SA, or PDVSA, and the International Investment Center, a government-led investment promotion entity, the people said.

The scope of the Biden administration’s decision to ease controls for six months, allowing oil companies to operate relatively freely in Venezuela, took many in the industry by surprise, setting off a rush to Caracas by would-be deal makers.

Venezuela has more than 40 oil partnerships with foreign and local companies, some of which suspended activity due to the difficult business climate. The government now seeks to replace these with companies willing to make new investments and produce.

The government is targeting production of 1 MMbpd, from about 750,000-800,000 bpd currently. The nation has about 300 Bbbl of reserves, a greater number than Saudi Arabia.

The country could reach that target by end of next year if the U.S. extends its license for another six months after it expires in March, according to Asdrúbal Oliveros, head of Caracas-based consultancy Ecoanalitica.

“The question is if this opening will last,” Oliveros said in a webcast this month.

Shell declined to comment. Repsol, Mol Nyrt, Maha Energy, the National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago and Bolivia’s state gas company YPFB didn’t reply to written requests for comment.

Venezuela’s information ministry, oil ministry and PDVSA didn’t reply emails seeking comment.

The Maduro government and a coalition of opposition parties signed an agreement in Barbados in October that contains guarantees for a fairer presidential election in 2024, including foreign observers and the release of political prisoners.