Latest News

Venezuelan oil officials to attend Houston energy conference

The American Association of Petroleum Geologists is holding an oil exploration conference outside Houston on Tuesday. Paula Henao and Jovanny Martnez, E&P vice president of PDVSA's state oil company, will be speaking.

The speeches will be the first time that senior oil officials of the South American nation have visited the U.S. since President Nicolas Maduro was overthrown by American forces in January. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, has since then promoted an ambitious plan to restore Venezuela's oil industry with $100 billion of new investments. Meanwhile, authorities in Venezuela have rewritten?rules in order to facilitate this effort. Henao, the interim president Delcy Rodriguez's predecessor in this position, was appointed oil minister by her in March. She arrived in Houston Sunday evening, said event organizers. According to a reliable source, she is expected to hold private meetings with a few oil companies.

She has been telling investors and service providers that want to increase production in recent weeks that Venezuela needs pumps and frequency converters for drilling, producing and processing crude and gas, as well as pipelines, valves and chemicals.

"Venezuela is incredibly important in strengthening energy security throughout the Western Hemisphere," said?U.S. At the conference on Monday in The Woodlands (Texas), Assistant Secretary of Energy Kyle Haustveit spoke about a recent trip to Venezuela's Orinoco?oil-belt region.

He said: "I think we have segregated countries in the Western Hemisphere based on the type of energy that they produce. The U.S. Shale, Canadian Heavy Oil, offshore Brazil's, Venezuela's Heavy Oil." "But if you zoom out, and look at the Western Hemisphere as a whole, we have the resources, people, infrastructure, and refining capability to make it strong in the Americas. We are strong with our allies.

On the sidelines of this event, Haustveit was pictured greeting Felix Plasencia, the diplomatic representative for Venezuela in the U.S. On Tuesday, Repsol and Maurel & Prom will be among the speakers. Reporting by Marianna Pararaga, Houston; additional reporting by Deisy buitrago, Caracas. Writing by Nathan Crooks and editing by Rod Nickel.

(source: Reuters)