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Venezuelan oil exports drop due to lower imports and inventories

According to documents and shipping data from the state-owned firm PDVSA, Venezuelan oil exports fell 26% in October to 808,000 barrels a day as its stocks decreased and it imported fewer volumes of diluents for exportable crude grades.

Exports from the OPEC nation reached a 5-year high in Septembre, after being boosted in part by a stable crude oil production of around 1.1m bpd. Also, robust imports of naphtha and light crude - mainly from Russia – earlier in the year were made to reduce its heavy oil output.

The data and documents revealed that imports dropped to 41,000 bpd and 73 500 bpd respectively in September and October. This is below the 105,000-110,000 Bpd recorded in the first half of the year.

Last month, 34 vessels left Venezuelan waters with 808,000 bpd crude and refined products as well as 195,000 metric tonnes of oil byproducts. Volume was 9% lower than the same month in 2024.

Since Washington imposed sanctions against PDVSA in 2019, about 80% of the total exports or 663,000 bpd went to China directly and indirectly through intermediaries who worked with PDVSA. Last month, China was Venezuela's top oil export destination.

According to data, Chevron's partner PDVSA shipped around 128,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil to the U.S.

Venezuela sent 11 000 bpd refined products to Cuba, its political ally.

In August, the government of President Donald Trump granted Chevron a license to operate in Venezuela sanctioned by the United States and export oil under certain restrictions. The restrictions allow Chevron to export about half its joint venture output after paying royalty payments and in-kind tax to President Nicolas Maduro’s administration.

(source: Reuters)