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Exclusive-Venezuela begins reversing oil output cuts as exports resume, sources say

By Thomson Reuters Jan 13, 2026 | 11:55 AM

By Marianna Parraga

Jan 13 (Reuters) – Venezuela’s state energy company PDVSA has begun reversing oil production cuts made under a strict U.S. oil embargo as crude exports resume under U.S. supervision, three sources close to operations said on Tuesday.

The OPEC member’s ‍oil exports fell close to zero in the weeks after the United States imposed a blockade on oil shipments in December, with only U.S. oil major Chevron exporting crude from its joint ventures with PDVSA under U.S. license.

The embargo left millions of barrels stuck in onshore tanks and vessels. As storage filled, PDVSA was forced to shut wells and order oil production cuts at joint ventures in the ‌country.

The state company is now instructing the joint ventures to resume ‌output from well clusters that were shut as a third oil tanker set sail from Venezuela’s coast on Tuesday.

Two supertankers had departed Venezuelan waters late on Monday carrying about 1.8 million barrels each of crude in what may be the first shipments of a 50-million-barrel supply deal between Caracas and ​Washington to get exports moving again in the wake of the U.S. capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

The country’s overall crude output fell to some 880,000 barrels per day (bpd) last ‍week, from 1.16 million bpd in late November, according ​to production figures from consultancies that independently track Venezuelan oil output.

The ​country’s main oil region, the Orinoco Belt, saw a reduction to some 410,000 bpd compared with 675,000 ‍bpd in late November, according to the figures.

PDVSA has yet to confirm that the supply deal for the 50 million barrels has been finalized. The state company had worked to prevent deeper output reductions that might be difficult to reverse, given that production facilities at some oilfields are dilapidated due to lack of maintenance.

PDVSA and the White House did not immediately ‍reply to requests for comment.

The vessels on Tuesday were heading north from Venezuela’s coast to the Caribbean, LSEG ship tracking data showed, where many oil companies including traders, producers and refiners lease ‍storage tanks. One of the ships ‍was signaling a terminal in the Bahamas as its destination.

Global trading ​houses Trafigura and Vitol last week obtained U.S. licenses to negotiate ​and trade ⁠Venezuelan oil cargoes, an early win in the fierce competition ‌between energy companies to secure Venezuelan barrels.

The trading companies have not disclosed the volume of exports they are entitled to, but refiners in the U.S. and in countries including India and China have begun negotiations to buy cargoes from the traders or through tenders that have yet to be organized.

(Reporting by Marianna Parraga and Reuters staff; additional reporting by Jarret Renshaw. Editing by Simon Webb, Nathan Crooks, Julia ⁠Symmes-Cobb and Louise Heavens)