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Valero and Phillips 66 purchase Venezuelan oil as part of Washington’s deal with Caracas

Two sources confirmed that Valero had purchased a cargo from Venezuelan crude oil on Wednesday. This is one of the initial deals made by U.S. Gulf Coast refining companies as part of Washington’s agreement with Caracas for exports of up to 50,000,000 barrels.

One source said that Phillips 66 had also bought a cargo.

Sources said that both companies bought crude oil from Vitol. The crude was then traded to be delivered to the U.S. Gulf Coast for a discount between $8.50 and $9.50 per barrel compared to Brent crude.

After President Nicolas Maduro was ousted in January, the U.S. Government awarded Vitol and Trafigura the first licenses to trade Venezuelan crude.

The first deals for the U.S. are from trading houses who were just authorized to sell Venezuelan crude this month.

Sources refused to identify themselves as the information about trade deals is confidential. Valero and Vitol didn't respond to requests for comment. The White House did not reply to a comment request either.

Phillips 66 announced on Thursday that, while it doesn't comment on commercial activities, its Gulf Coast refining facilities are designed to process a variety of crude oil, including heavy.

"Access to heavy crude represents a valuable opportunity for us." The company stated in an email that it optimizes its crude slate according to availability, economics and operational requirements.

Sources claim that Vitol and Trafigura purchased the Venezuelan oil at a discount of $15 per barrel compared to Brent, the benchmark global oil. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said that the initial sales of Venezuelan crude oil worth $500 million were?negotiated at a $15 discount per barrel to Brent. Shipping sources say that the trading houses are responsible for the costs of shipping the crude oil to the U.S. Gulf Coast. These range between $2.5 to $3.5 per barrel, depending on the tanker size. This would allow them to make a profit of $2 to $4 per barrel on the Venezuelan oil that they resell. Venezuelan Merey heavy oil is being offered to the United States. Last week, refiners started at a discount between $6 and $7.50 a barrel to Brent. However, this was lowered due to a lack of interest. Vitol, Trafigura and others also made offers to Indian refiners for $8-8.50 below Brent per barrel. However, this also failed to elicit much interest.

According to U.S. Government data, before sanctions were imposed on Venezuela in 2019, several large U.S. Gulf Coast refining plants bought and processed as much as 800,000 barrels of heavy oil per day. (Reporting from Georgina McCartney in Houston and Arathy Sommesekhar; additional reporting by Marianna Parra and Shariq Khan; editing by Christian Schmollinger and Edwina Gibbs)

(source: Reuters)