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Marathon Petroleum buys Venezuelan crude for US refineries

Marathon Petroleum bought two cargoes Venezuelan crude oil at the end of January, and executives expect their refineries to process more heavy grades.

Refiners in the United States are expected to gain from President Donald Trump’s efforts to increase output in Venezuela, and to rebuild the country's deteriorating oil sector after the capture of Nicolas Maduro last month.

Since Washington and Caracas met, Venezuelan crude oil exports have risen.

Deal worth $2 Billion

Last month,

U.S. Gulf Coast Complex Refineries

The U.S. produces heavy sour oil, but Venezuela's is more suitable for processing.

Maryann Mannen, CEO of Marathon Oil, said: "We see the access to Venezuelan crude oil as a positive for U.S. Energy and specifically for Marathon Oil."

LEANING INTO HEAVY CRUDE

Chief Commercial Officer Rick Hessling stated that "right now, the signals point towards a heavier, more sour slate. We are therefore leaning in significantly."

The refiner runs 50% sweet crudes, and 50% sour in its entire refining system.

Mannen stated that the prices for Western Canadian Select were the highest to date. ?If the economics warrant it, however, their refineries - including the 606,000-barrels-per-day facility in Garyville, Louisiana - have the ability to quickly pivot ?to process Venezuelan crude, she added.

Venezuelan heavy crude oil cargoes

For delivery at the Gulf Coast, crude oil was being sold at a price of $9.50 per barrel below Brent benchmark while Canadian WCS for delivery to 'the Gulf Coast' was trading at a $10.25 discount under Brent futures.

Marathon's refinery, which produces 631,000 barrels per day in Galveston Bay (Texas), is also able to run Venezuelan crude.

Valero Energy, Phillips 66 and other refiners have also bought Venezuelan crude as part of Washington's deal with Caracas.

(source: Reuters)