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How Venezuela pulled its oil production out of a tailspin – Metro US

How Venezuela pulled its oil production out of a tailspin

FILE PHOTO: Crude oil drips from a valve at an
FILE PHOTO: Crude oil drips from a valve at an oil well operated by Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA in Morichal

(Reuters) – Venezuela this year almost doubled its oil production from last year’s decades-low as its state-owned company struck deals that let it pump and process more extra heavy crude into exportable grades.

The surprising reversal began as state-run Petroleos de Venezuela, known as PDVSA, won help from small drilling firms by rolling over old debts and later obtained steady supplies of a key diluent from Iran. The two lifted output to 824,000 barrels per day (bpd) in November, well above the first three-quarters of the year and 90% more than the monthly average a year earlier.

Whether it can continue to ramp up production is unclear. Years of unpaid bills, mismanagement and, more recently, U.S. sanctions have cut its access to specialized drilling equipment and foreign investment. The sanctions have also limited its customers to firms with no track record of trading.

PDVSA’s latest gains – including reaching 1 million barrels of daily output for the first time in nearly three years, which Oil Minister Tareck El Aissami described in a Christmas day message as a “great victory” – still fall short of current management’s 2021 goal of producing 1.28 million bpd.

Workers in producing regions say the reopening of oilfields continues and more flow stations are expected to restart. However, oil experts said PDVSA has done all it can and further gains might be capped by a lack of additional rigs and functioning upgraders for its tar-like crude.

“Base production in 2021 was way below PDVSA’s production capacity,” said Francisco Monaldi, director of the Latin American Energy Program at Rice University’s Baker Institute in Houston. “We are reaching that capacity now. To see an output increase during 2022, investment in new wells and upgrading infrastructure is needed,” he added.

HELPED BY ALLIES

The main turning point came from a swap deal between state-run firms PDVSA and National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) that began in September. It proved crucial for generating exportable grades from the extra-heavy crude produced at Venezuela’s top region, the Orinoco Belt.

Hard-currency proceeds from domestic fuel sales and higher oil exports to Asia have also allowed PDVSA to amortize some debts with service companies and settle overdue debts with a promise of future work and permits that allowed some domestic firms to operate workover rigs.

A few service companies also accepted payments in kind, mainly oil byproducts and residual fuel https://www.reuters.com/article/venezuela-usa-methanol-idAFL1N2S61XY later sold domestically and overseas, according to people familiar with the matter.

By mid-December, there were a total of 47 workover and maintenance rigs active in the Orinoco Belt and 29 more in other regions, according to a PDVSA internal document seen by Reuters. That same report showed 19 others that were inactive. No active drilling rigs, which are needed for building output capacity, were reported.

PDVSA did not reply to a request for comment. The U.S. Department of Treasury, which enforces sanctions on PDVSA, did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

For a related graphic on Venezuela’s oil production over time, click https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ce/mypmnazxyvr/Pasted%20image%201640210673359.png

RETRACING LOST GROUND

Venezuela reported annual crude production of 569,000 bpd last year and its exports averaged 627,000 bpd as PDVSA drained flush inventories. The official numbers do not exclude imported diluents or water present in stored crude.

But independent analysts and experts agree production has bounced back. Consultancy IPD Latin America estimates Venezuela’s crude output will average 640,000-660,000 bpd this year, excluding condensate and natural gas liquids.

In Eastern Venezuela, two crude projects that partially restored output – Petro San Felix and Petrodelta – are looking for financing to continue increasing production, said Antero Alvarado, managing partner at consultancy Gas Energy.

Coiled-tubing service firms have helped to quickly reopen wells in that region, two sources said.

“PDVSA has amortized debt to providers,” Alvarado added. The company also repaired three of its 750-horsepower rigs imported from China, aiming to activate them next year, he said.

In the nation’s Western region, where equipment robbery has been rampant, at least two separate projects – in mature oilfields Tia Juana and Cabimas – plan to almost double output in 2022, people familiar with the ventures said.

“Production is restarting over here. Workover rigs have not rested,” said a worker from Maracaibo Lake in northwestern Venezuela. He said some inoperative flow stations are expected to restart in 2022.

HURDLES REMAIN

Delayed debt payments are expected to remain a key issue. The agreements with oilfield service firms to resume work are fragile and could fall apart if PDVSA does not keep its promises.

“Debt keeps growing because companies are being paid just a fraction of what they generate in monthly services to PDVSA,” said an executive from a contractor who asked not to be identified due to fear or retaliation.

A worker from another firm said his company has been working intermittently this year due to payment issues.

In the Orinoco region, where diluents are essential to keep output flowing, pushing production beyond current levels will require at least one more oil upgrader, at the Petromonagas or Petro San Felix projects, to take full advantage of diluent supplies, experts said.

PDVSA’s infrastructure to discharge and store diluents also has become stretched thin. Since routine shipments from Iran began arriving there have been delays exporting crude, according to internal company documents. PDVSA also has had to employ much-needed tankers to store the diluents.

(Reporting by Marianna Parraga in Houston, Deisy Buitrago in Caracas and Mircely Guanipa in Maracay, Venezuela; Additional reporting by Tim Gardner in Washington; Editing by Gary McWilliams and Matthew Lewis)