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Venezuela restarts El Palito’s fluid catalytic cracked to offset the largest refinery’s problems

Sources close to the company's operations on Tuesday said that Venezuela's PDVSA, a state-owned oil company, is restarting the fluid catalytic cracked (FCC) at its El Palito refinery, which was shut down for 11 months. This will partially offset a suspension of key refinery units due to an electrical blackout.

PDVSA is increasing domestic refining in order to avoid a fuel crisis. The U.S. government has tightened sanctions against the energy sector of the country, which prevents it from importing replacement parts and equipment necessary to maintain and upgrade its refining units.

Venezuela's largest refinery, the 645,000-barrel-per-day Amuay, has been restarting several operational units since a blackout late last week, but its FCC is still out of service, limiting the volume of gasoline blendstock the country can produce.

One source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said: "That's the reason they're restarting El Palito cracker." It's already producing 26,000. bpd catalytic naphtha.

El Palito, Venezuela's smallest refining facility, has a capacity of 146,000 bpd for crude processing. The previous attempts to restart the FCC were unsuccessful. Now, workers are trying to produce up to 35,000 bpd blendstock.

Sources say that the 955,000-bpd Paraguana refinery center, which includes Amuay & Cardon refineries and four crude distillation units, was processing 237,000 bpd or 25% of the installed capacity as of Tuesday.

PDVSA didn't immediately respond to a comment request.

The state oil company is trying to provide more crude and feedstock

Cardon

Petropiar will be reorganized as part of the plan to reorganize its operations once a U.S. licence for Chevron Venezuela's unit expires in a month. This will leave all operations to PDVSA.

A separate source reported that Venezuela is also trying to reactivate an important thermoelectric plant in the central region of the country to reduce blackouts and power rationing. Reporting by Staff; Editing by Mark Porter & Paul Simao

(source: Reuters)