By Sheila Dang
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas, Feb 26 (Reuters) – Sales under a flagship oil supply agreement between Venezuela and โthe U.S. are expected to reach $2 billion by the โend of this month, U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright told reporters in โTexas on Thursday.
The U.S. took control of Venezuela’s oil exports shortly after U.S. forces captured President Nicolas Maduro in early January, with proceeds going to a U.S.-supervised fund in Qatar.
Since then, trading houses โVitol and Trafigura have โ been marketing and trading the lion’s share of the OPEC country’s oil under the pact, while โ partners of Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA, particularly Chevron, are boosting output and shipments.
The export increase is already returning Venezuela’s crude and โfuel to โmarkets that had not seen โit arriving for months โor years.
More customers in Asia and Europe are negotiating deals to import soon, with 40 million barrels expected to have been sold by the end of February at about $50 per barrel, Wright said. The pact’s initial sales target was between 30 million โand 50 million barrels, U.S. President โDonald Trump had said.
Chinese independent refineries that โwere previously importing sanctioned โoil can now buy Venezuelan crude on the โopen market, Wright said. Trump โhas said oil โcargoes will only be sold at fair market prices.
Wright also said that millions of barrels of Venezuelan oil currently โin floating storage โin Venezuelan waters are in the process of being sold.
(Reporting โby Sheila Dang and Curtis Williams; Writing by Marianna โParraga; Editing by Jamie Freed)