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Spain's Repsol receives US license for Venezuela oil, gas projects -sources.

Spain's Repsol has got a license from the U.S. Treasury Department authorizing the energy business to continue and broaden its oil and gas organization in Venezuela, sources near to the choice said on Thursday.

Repsol has a number of joint endeavors with Venezuela's state oil company PDVSA to produce crude and gas in the country. The two firms just recently agreed to include two big onshore fields to one of the joint projects.

A U.S. authorities said today that Washington is evaluating approximately 50 individual license requests to do energy services in Venezuela. They follow the expiration in April of a broad permission that allowed the South American nation to export oil to its selected market and receive financial investment as an exemption to the U.S. sanction program.

Repsol, PDVSA and the White House National Security Council did not right away react to requests for comment. The Treasury decreased to comment.

Repsol and PDVSA goal to double oil output from the Petroquiriquire joint venture, where they are presently producing some 20,000 barrels each day of crude and 40 million cubic feet each day of gas.

The expansion, approved by Venezuela's National Assembly, adds the promising La Ceiba and Tomoporo oilfields to the joint venture. The two areas have more than 5 billion barrels of oil in location.

The U.S. State Department previously acknowledged European companies with operations in Venezuela, including Repsol and Italy's Eni, the Spanish business, might recover pending financial obligation and joint endeavor dividends in Venezuela by taking and refining Venezuelan oil.