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Chevron
Corp. Chief Executive Officer Mike Wirth pledged to work closely with the U.S.
to remain in Venezuela despite a spiraling crisis that has led rival oil major
Total SA to retreat.
“Our strong
intent is to stay on the ground in Venezuela and be part of building a better
future for the people of Venezuela,” Wirth said in an interview in Houston
Monday. “We’ve got a very close coordination under way with multiple agencies
within the U.S. government.”
Chevron is
the largest American oil company left in the South American country, which has
the world’s biggest oil reserves and where President Nicolas Maduro faces
growing pressure from the U.S. and other nations to step aside. Sanctions
issued last month by the Trump administration mean U.S. companies can’t deal
with any arm of the Venezuelan government or entities controlled by Maduro,
whom it considers illegitimate.
Mike Wirth
during an interview in Houston, on Feb. 11.Photographer: Spike
Johnson/Bloomberg
But
Chevron, and some U.S. oilfield-service companies including Schlumberger Ltd.,
have been granted a license until July 27 on their operations within the
country. Wirth declined to comment on whether he sees that as a hard deadline
and point in time when Chevron would need to withdraw.
“We work
closely with the U.S. government to understand how their policy objectives are
being manifest through the sanctions they have issued and to ensure we remain
in full compliance with U.S. law,” he said.
Chevron has
loaded three U.S.-bound ships with Venezuelan oil since Friday, according to
shipping reports and ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg.
Upgrader
Partnership
Chevron,
the world’s third-largest publicly traded oil company by market value, is a
joint-venture partner with state-run Petroleos de Venezuela SA, or PDVSA, in
the country’s second-largest upgrader, a key facility that converts tar-like,
extra-heavy crude into lighter oils for refineries. If Chevron withdrew, it
could potentially hand the venture to Maduro, which would go against the spirit
of the U.S.’s sanctions.
“It’s a
fluid environment,” Wirth said, adding that the safety of employees and
operations is the priority. “We do contingency planning. That’s based on our
assessment of risks anywhere in the world.”
Total SA
plans to pull all its employees from Venezuela as a result of the U.S.
sanctions, Chief Executive Officer Patrick Pouyanne said last week. The French
company wasn’t on the list of exempt companies published by the Treasury Department
on Nov. 1. On Monday, Pouyanne said Total may stay in its Venezuela joint
venture, with conditions, as it seeks to “understand what exactly” the U.S.
sanctions are.
The U.S.
and dozens of other countries have backed National Assembly leader Juan Guaido
as interim president as they seek to loosen Maduro’s grip on power. Wirth said
Chevron remains “neutral” on who’s in charge.
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