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Caracas seeks N Korea help with sanctions, coltan

  • Spanish Market: Crude oil, Metals
  • 04/10/19

Venezuela is stepping up relations with North Korea to gain sanctions-busting advice and explore metals marketing routes in Asia, according to Venezuelan government officials consulted by Argus.

President Nicolas Maduro said this week he plans to visit North Korea "very soon". The visit would form part of an Asian tour that also could include stops in Vietnam and China, according to presidential palace and foreign ministry officials.

Close Maduro ally Diosdado Cabello, who presides a rubber-stamp constituent assembly, returned to Caracas from North Korea and Vietnam last week to prepare for the presidential visit.

During Maduro's official sojourn, several agreements will be signed in strategic areas including mining, agriculture and "general trade," a palace official said. Bilateral security also figures in a tentative agenda that is being developed jointly by presidential and foreign ministry aides.

The palace official noted that both countries "have much in common including the US empire's constant aggression against our sovereign independence and national interests."

A defense ministry official in Caracas said Maduro wants to forge a security alliance between Venezuela, Cuba and North Korea.

Caracas and Pyongyang have maintained distant bilateral diplomatic relations since 1965.

A foreign ministry official said the Maduro government is seeking advice from North Korea on how to evade global US sanctions that have hamstrung the state-owned oil industry and choked off Venezuela's access to international financial markets. "North Korea has decades of experience evading international sanctions," the official said.

A US government official dismissed the significance of the warming ties between Caracas and Pyongyang. Maduro is "grasping at straws" and "posturing" in the face of international pressure to remove him, the official said.

Late Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez prioritized efforts to strengthen relations with North Korea after he first assumed power in January 1999, but the effort did not gain momentum until Maduro replaced Chavez in April 2013, according to the foreign ministry.

North Korea opened its embassy in Caracas in 2014. The Maduro government did not inaugurate Venezuela's embassy in Pyongyang until 21 August 2019 in a joint ceremony presided by Maduro's deputy foreign minister Ruben Dario Molina and North Korean deputy foreign minister Pak Myong Guk.

Coltan king

The Venezuelan delegation to Pyongyang in August was led by Maduro's son, Nicolas Maduro Guerra. Nicknamed Nicolasito, Maduro Guerra controls coltan and gold-mining projects in Bolivar state near Venezuela's border with Colombia. His partners include senior army and national guard officers in Maduro's government, two mining ministry officials tell Argus.

During Nicolasito's week-long stay in Pyongyang, he discussed mining, agricultural and financial issues with senior North Korean government officials, according to a Venezuelan official who formed part of his delegation.

Nicolasito is Venezuela's "untouchable coltan king" and is "seeking new routes to smuggle out coltan and gold from Venezuela" following a recent smuggling bust in Italy, a disgruntled official with the Sebin national intelligence service tells Argus.

During his Asian visits last week, Cabello was tasked by Maduro with proposing potential bilateral agricultural and oil ventures with Vietnamese investors, the palace official said.

Maduro is seeking Vietnamese technical advice and investment to resuscitate Venezuela's rice farming industry which has shrunk from about 1.2mn t/yr in 2014 to only about 400,000 tons in 2018, the palace official said.

The palace official said Maduro also hopes to persuade state-owned PetroVietnam to restart development of PetroMacareo, a 200,000 b/d Orinoco extra-heavy crude joint venture from which the Vietnamese company withdrew in 2013.

According to state-owned Vietnamese media, national assembly chair Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan "affirmed that Vietnam is willing to share experience in socio-economic development, especially in agricultural production, with Venezuela."


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03/07/24

Anglo assures customers of 3Q met coal shipments

Anglo assures customers of 3Q met coal shipments

London, 3 July (Argus) — UK-South African mining firm Anglo American has today informed several steel mills and trading firms that it expects to meet its contracted obligations for the third quarter, Argus has learned. This follows the closure of Anglo American's 5mn t/yr Grosvenor coking coal mine in the Bowen basin region of Australia's Queensland, following an accident in late June. Anglo American is "evaluating the impact of this incident and is expecting to perform on its third-quarter obligations as planned at this moment, subject to change depending on further assessment", an Asian steel mill source said. Others said the same, with an Indian buyer stating that the company is "not expecting any material impact to supply in the short term, since the miner is expected to meet third-quarter commitments". Some sources cautioned that cargo delays are still anticipated, with one trading source expecting delays of more than 20 days. Production at Grosvenor had been strong for the past couple of months, after a challenging 2023 . The producer increased spot offers on the market in the past two months, with at least three July-loading Panamax cargoes sold and at least two Panamax cargoes being offered for August loading, before the 29 June accident. The paper market also cooled down today after sharp increases earlier this week, market participants said. Fob Australia premium futures contracts were trading at around $253-254/t and $257-258/t for July and August, respectively, on 3 July, falling by around $8-10/t from 2 July. Supply availability for the fourth quarter remains uncertain, with some market participants expecting the market to tighten in anticipation of stronger demand. "There is some demand surfacing from India this week for August and September-loading cargoes, so prices may see some support once September cargoes are being discussed, because other mines are also going to be in maintenance during that time," an international trader said. The Argus premium low-volatile hard coking coal price was assessed at $257.50/t fob Australia on 3 July, down by $2.10/t from 2 July. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Japan’s domestic car output rebounds on year in May


03/07/24
03/07/24

Japan’s domestic car output rebounds on year in May

Tokyo, 3 July (Argus) — Japan's domestic automobile production in May increased on the year for the first time in four months, mostly because of output recovery at manufacturer Daihatsu. Total passenger vehicle output rose to 612,364 units, up by 4.8pc from a year earlier. Production increased, largely because Daihatsu restarted domestic operations in early May. The manufacturer suspended operations in December 2023, when it was accused of tampering with safety test results. Daihatsu's production still fell on the year by 17pc in May, but the year-on-year declines have slowed from 92pc in February, 66pc in March, and 69pc in April. The country's car output could continue to recover. Toyota resumed production of the Prius model on 17 June, after it suspended operations following a recall for a safety check in April, according to a company representative who spoke to Argus . The country's authority in early June ordered Toyota and Mazda to halt some of their car deliveries , following alleged false reporting of safety test results. These disruptions could cut production, but the manufacturers are managing to keep overall output by increasing production of models that are not subject to the order, according to the country's ministry of trade and industry on 2 July. By Yusuke Maekawa Japan's car production (units)* May '24 Apr '24 May '23 y-o-y ± % Toyota 255,314 251,485 248,287 2.8 Daihatsu 38,564 21,317 46,642 -17.3 Mazda 55,523 63,136 51,040 8.8 Subaru 46,400 41,852 49,790 -6.8 Honda 51,125 57,196 44,510 14.9 Suzuki 83,157 86,668 65,332 27.3 Mitsubishi 37,422 34,095 31,538 18.7 Nissan 44,859 48,273 47,197 -5.0 Total 612,364 604,022 584,336 4.8 Source: Japanese car makers * Excludes commercial vehicles Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Venezuela's Maduro open to talks with the US


02/07/24
02/07/24

Venezuela's Maduro open to talks with the US

Caracas, 2 July (Argus) — Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro plans to talk with US envoys on Wednesday to discuss allowing the South American country to increase oil exports in exchange for free and fair elections, he said late on Monday. But Maduro's call for dialogue comes less than a month before the 28 July election in which polls show him up to 40 percentage points behind his main challenger. It is also after the US rescinded a six-month reprieve on sanctions in April, accusing Venezuela of violating a commitment to hold a fair vote. Maduro said that the US had sought dialogue with him "for two months in a row", and, "after thinking about it, I have accepted". The head of the pro-Maduro assembly elected in 2020, Jorge Rodriguez, will represent him in the talks, Maduro said. The US State Department declined to directly confirm Maduro's statement but said that the US welcomed "dialogue in good faith, and we support the Venezuelan people's desire for competitive and inclusive elections on July 28." The US ties sanctions relief to Maduro's observing the 2023 Barbados agreement with the Venezuelan opposition, which promised to hold a competitive presidential election. The US in April reimposed sanctions against Venezuela because the Maduro government did not allow the main opposition contender, Maria Corina Machado, to run for president. Former Venezuelan diplomat Edmundo Gonzalez is the sole presidential candidate representing the opposition Unitary Platform. "We are clear-eyed that democratic change will not be easy, and certainly requires a serious commitment," the US State Department said. "This is something that we will continue to focus on when we will engage in dialogue with with a broad range of Venezuelan actors." Venezuela in recent weeks has barred an additional 10 city mayors from running for office for 15 years after they expressed support for Gonzalez, according to the CNE electoral authority and the comptroller general's office. During the first six months of 2024 Maduro has arrested 39 people connected to Gonzalez's campaign, the last one as recently as 30 June, a campaign source told Argus, using figures from Venezuelan non-governmental organizations. Police over the weekend also detained Machado for several hours while leaving a rally for Gonzalez. Venezuela's oil output increased by around 4pc in May to 911,700 b/d from 878,000 b/d in April as drilling campaigns showed results after three months of flat production, according to the oil ministry. But US sanctions are expected to keep a cap on much additional growth. By Carlos Camacho Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

S Korea's LGES, Renault sign 39GWh LFP battery deal


02/07/24
02/07/24

S Korea's LGES, Renault sign 39GWh LFP battery deal

Singapore, 2 July (Argus) — South Korean battery manufacturer LG Energy Solution (LGES) will supply 39GWh of lithium-iron-phosphate (LFP) batteries to French car manufacturer Renault's electric vehicle (EV) division Ampere from 2025-30. Under the agreement, LGES will provide LFP batteries in pouch form to Ampere from the end of 2025 through to 2030, said LGES on 2 July. The batteries will come from its facility in Poland where it has a 86GWh battery plant, which is the largest in Europe. This marks the firm's first "large-scale" LFP battery supply deal for EVs, said LGES. The firm will continue to expand its supply of LFP batteries for EVs, starting with the European market, said the firm. LFP batteries are typically more cost-competitive compared to nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC) batteries given the materials used, and LGES sees demand rising for the former as demand for affordable entry-level EVs grows. Ampere earlier said it will be integrating LFP technology alongside the NMC batteries that Renault has been using, because of market volatility and changes in battery technologies. LGES and Chinese battery manufacturer CATL will provide Ampere with LFP batteries and technology, with LGES providing batteries from its Poland facility, and CATL providing the technology until 2030. The three firms will set up an "integrated value chain" in Europe, said Ampere. The decision to integrate LFP and cell-to-pack technologies — which raises the volumetric density of batteries — will help Ampere in cutting 20pc of its battery costs, said the company. This is part of the firm's roadmap to cut 40pc of costs by 2027 or 2028. Ampere targets to sell 1mn units of EVs in 2031 with a goal of reaching €25bn ($26.83bn) in revenue that same year through seven of its EV models, said the firm late last year. Sales of plug-in EVs, which include plug-in hybrid EVs and battery EVs, fell by over 10pc in Europe during May on weak German demand, with sales of hybrid EVs rising by 15pc on the year across the EU, European Free Trade Association and the UK. By Joseph Ho Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Petroecuador expects more crude with fewer wells


01/07/24
01/07/24

Petroecuador expects more crude with fewer wells

Quito, 1 July (Argus) — State-owned oil company Petroecuador will drill fewer wells this year than first planned but still expects to produce 5,000 b/d more crude than initially forecast for 2024, according to the work plan of interim chief executive Diego Guerrero. Petroecuador plans to drill 90 wells this year, including 27 drilled through May and 63 planned for the rest of the year — well below the 156 wells initially forecast under former chief executive Marcela Reinoso , who resigned in May. But the company expects crude output to average 390,000 b/d by December, according to Guerrero's plans, higher than the 370,000 b/d estimate made before he took office, and up from 369,000 b/d reported for June. Ecuador is expected to lose about 50,000 b/d come 1 September when it shuts down the Ishpingo, Tambococha and Tiputini (ITT) fields in block 43 after Ecuadorians voted to end oil activities in the environmentally sensitive region. Guerrero's plan did not break out how much output it expects from ITT this year. Petroecuador did not respond to a request for comment. Reinoso told the national assembly in February that without ITT, Petroecuador's production would fall to 358,500 b/d in September before rising again to 373,300 b/d in December, leading to a 2024 average of about 385,000 b/d. But petroleum engineers' association vice-president Fernando Reyes said that both the new and old goals for December production are too optimistic without ITT. After a 50,000 b/d drop with the end of ITT production, Reyes believes under a best-case scenario new drilling could add 20,000–30,000 b/d of production, bringing December output to 360,000-370,000 b/d. But Guerrero's higher projections are feasible if Petroecuador keeps pumping crude from ITT, Reyes said. Ecuadorian president Daniel Noboa in January proposed a one-year delay on plans to end drilling in the ITT, but the plan has not advanced. Guerrero's work plan also includes new projects to recover associated gas from the Sacha Norte 2, Sacha Central, Drago and Shushufindi fields, and also workovers in four wells in the offshore Amistad natural gas field. Petroecuador produced 81pc of Ecuador's crude output of 484,499 b/d in May. By Alberto Araujo Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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