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Shipping data reveals that Venezuela's PDVSA imports naphtha from Russia.

Shipping data reveals that Venezuela's PDVSA imports naphtha from Russia.

According to data from vessel tracking and a document that was seen on Wednesday, Venezuela's PDVSA, the state-owned oil firm, has received and unloaded a 700,000 barrel cargo of Russian-origin heavy naphtha. This is a crucial product for Venezuela's heavy crude production.

PDVSA, a company sanctioned by the United States, needs to import light crude and condensate in order to dilute and export its heavy oil. In the past, Russia and Iran - both under U.S. sanction - have supplied the country with these products.

The Russian import was the first of many diluents that the state company purchased ahead of Washington's May deadline for closing down all transactions in order to cancel U.S. licenses granted to its partners.

According to TankerTrackers.com (a monitoring service), the Barbados flagged tanker Telesto left a ship-toship location near Russia's Taman Port, as identified by satellite photos. It added that the naphtha appears to have originated in Russia's Tuapse Port.

According to the shipping documents and TankerTrackers.com, an Aframax oil tanker started unloading at PDVSA’s Jose port last week.

The document states that PDVSA unloaded last month two cargoes containing imported light crude of unknown origin, which was also intended to be used for dilution of a total amount of 1,88 million barrels.

PDVSA modified its crude blending operations and upgraded its Orinoco Belt production region earlier this year to reduce its naphtha needs and refine more at home.

Since the cancellation of the licenses, the OPEC nation's oil exports are stable at around 800,000 barrels a day. PDVSA has sent more cargoes into Asia, after losing the U.S., and European markets. (Reporting and editing by Emelia Sithole Matarise; Staff Reporting)

(source: Reuters)