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PdV crude supply, petchems impacted by gas line blast

  • : Fertilizers, Natural gas, Oil products, Petrochemicals
  • 21/03/23

A natural gas pipeline blast in eastern Venezuela is having far-reaching impact on the country's crude and petrochemical operations, highlighting the role of gas in sustaining the fragile national oil industry.

By knocking out the Pigap 2 gas compression complex, the 20 March blast shut in around 20,000 b/d of Venezuelan state-owned PdV's Santa Barbara light crude production for up to six weeks, according to multiple incident reports seen by Argus.

The blast took down up to 1bn cf/d of associated gas production as well.

One of Venezuela's legacy grades, 39°API Santa Barbara crude is used for blending with extra-heavy crude from the Orinoco oil belt to produce 16°API Merey for export.

The incident took place within a dense grid of crude and gas pipelines and valves that transports gas to Pigap 2 where it is compressed and reinjected into oil fields.

The grid connected to the blast-damaged 36-inch gas pipeline also directs light crude and associated gas to Orinoco heavy crude blending, upgrading and petrochemical plants at the Jose complex on the coast of Anzoategui state. Among the plants that have been shut down or curtailed for lack of gas are Mitsubishi-led methanol producer Metor, Eni-led Supermetanol and fertilizer producer Fertinitro led by state-owned Pequiven.

A senior PdV eastern division official describes the gas and crude pipeline grid where the blast occurred as "critical to the company's upstream crude and gas operations in Monagas."

A preliminary damage assessment of the ruptured gas pipeline said repairs could take up to six weeks, but the PdV manager said repairs could be completed in less than a month. "We hope to restart the 36-inch gas pipeline by 15 April," he said.

The accident is the latest setback for PdV, which had tentatively recovered its production to more than 500,000 b/d in recent weeks. The government of President Nicolas Maduro routinely blames US sanctions and sabotage for industrial accidents.


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25/04/24

Eni cuts capex on macro headwinds, tariff uncertainty

Eni cuts capex on macro headwinds, tariff uncertainty

London, 24 April (Argus) — Italy's Eni has cut its spending plans for this year in response to macroeconomic headwinds, uncertainty around trade tariffs and a lower oil price outlook. The company is planning a series of "mitigation measures" worth over €2bn [$2.28bn], a key element of which is a reduction in 2025 capex to below €8.5bn from previous guidance of €9bn. Eni now expects net capex — which takes into account acquisitions and asset sales — to come in below €6bn this year, compared with its initial plan of €6.5bn-7bn. Other savings will come from "mitigating actions" around its portfolio, operating costs and "other cash initiatives", the firm said. Eni's plan reflects a tariff-driven deterioration in the outlook for the global economy and, in turn, global oil demand and oil prices. The company has revised its Brent crude price assumption for 2025 down to $65/bl from $75/bl previously. It has also lowered its refining margin indicator assumption for the year to $3.5/bl from $4.7/bl. The lower oil price assumption has not changed the company's upstream production forecast — it still expects 2025 output to average 1.7mn b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d). But Eni's production in the first quarter was only 1.65mn boe/d, 5pc lower than the same period last year. The firm's gas production took the biggest hit, falling by 9pc on the year to 4.5bn ft³/d (861,000 boe/d) as a result of divestments and natural decline at mature fields. Liquids output fell by 1pc year on year to 786,000 boe/d. Eni reported a profit of €1.17bn for January-March, 3pc lower than the same period last year. Underlying profit— which strips out inventory valuation effects and other one off-items — fell by 11pc on the year to €1.41bn. Eni said the fall in profits was mainly due to lower oil prices. The company also had to contend with weaker refining margins and throughputs, as well as a continuing downturn in the European chemicals sector. By Aydin Calik Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Algerian urea to head to India for IPL tender


25/04/24
25/04/24

Algerian urea to head to India for IPL tender

Amsterdam, 24 April (Argus) — Swiss trading firm Ameropa is set to load 45,000t of Algerian granular urea for India under IPL's 8 April tender, marking the first urea shipment along that route since December 2023. The firm has nominated the Spar Tarus to sail for the Indian east coast. The shipment highlights the fallout from US president Donald Trump's import tariff levy rollout, combined with dwindling demand in Europe and Brazil. The US had placed an initial import tariff of 30pc on Algerian urea on 2 April , before granting a 90-day reprieve on 9 April. The US had been Algeria's second-largest destination market after Brazil, with Algeria's urea supplies accounting for 456,000t of US imports last year and shipping as much as 590,000t to the US in 2023. The lack of clarity on the situation in the US likely forced the pivot towards India, with the Indian east coast price of $398.24/t cfr under IPL's enquiry offering higher netbacks and liquidity compared with Europe and Brazil at the time. But the US market has since firmed further, increasing its attractiveness, despite the 10pc import tariffs in place. Domestic urea barge prices jumped to $435-470/short ton fob Nola on 23 April, while the European spring season is coming to an end and Brazil's appetite remains comparatively lacklustre. Algeria benefits from a sailing time of 20-24 days to the US, depending on the destination port, the shortest among major producers. The Phatra Naree has been nominated to load around 35,000t of urea from Algeria's Arzew city to the US on 27 April, according to trade analytics firm Kpler data. Meanwhile, Egyptian producer Mopco sold 30,000t of granular urea at $395/t fob on 23 April, likely for the US. By Harry Minihan Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Taiwan’s CPC buys Vincent crude ahead of CDU turnaround


25/04/24
25/04/24

Taiwan’s CPC buys Vincent crude ahead of CDU turnaround

Singapore, 24 April (Argus) — Taiwanese state-controlled refiner CPC has purchased a rare cargo of Australian heavy sweet Vincent crude, ahead of a June crude distillation unit (CDU) turnaround that is expected to tighten blendstock component availability at its refinery. CPC recently bought the end-May loading Vincent from Japanese trading firm Mitsui at around a $5-5.50/bl premium to North Sea Dated, traders said. Vincent is usually sold in volumes of 550,000 bl. An upcoming CDU maintenance at a CPC refinery in June, expected to last 1-2 months, will limit production of other blendstock components needed for fuel oil production, market sources told Argus . It is unclear which refinery — the 200,000 b/d Taoyuan or 400,000 b/d Dalin — is having the maintenance. Production constraints, arising from the upcoming turnaround, may have prompted CPC to seek alternative blendstocks like Vincent to help meet its fuel oil supply obligations during this period. CPC is responsible for supplying the majority of Taiwan's bunker fuel at domestic ports. The Vincent deal marks CPC's first crude purchase from Australia since November 2023, when it received heavy sweet Van Gogh crude, data from oil analytics firm Vortexa show. Van Gogh is similar in quality to Vincent. The last time CPC took Vincent was in March 2023. CPC has mainly relied on US light sweet WTI in the past year, supplemented by medium sour Saudi Arab Light and Abu Dhabi Upper Zakum. Vincent and Van Gogh, as well as Australian heavy sweet Pyrenees, are valued as blendstocks for very low-sulphur fuel oil production in the Singapore strait region. These grades' heavier density relative to other sweet crude grades make them less economical for refining, and better suited for direct use in fuel oil blending. By Asill Bardh and Reena Nathan Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US states including New York sue Trump over tariffs


25/04/23
25/04/23

US states including New York sue Trump over tariffs

New York, 23 April (Argus) — A coalition of 12 states including New York is suing the administration of President Donald Trump for imposing "illegal" tariffs that threaten to raise inflation and derail economic growth. The lawsuit, filed by attorneys general from the 12 states, argues that Congress has not granted the president the authority to impose the tariffs and the administration violated the law by imposing them through executive orders, social media posts, and agency orders. "President Trump's reckless tariffs have skyrocketed costs for consumers and unleashed economic chaos across the country," said New York governor Kathy Hochul (D). "New York is standing up to fight back against the largest federal tax hike in American history." The lawsuit alleges the tariffs will increase unemployment, threaten wages by slowing economic growth and push up the cost of key goods from electronics to building materials. The lawsuit, which was filed in the United States Court of International Trade, seeks a court order halting the tariffs. By Stephen Cunningham Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Tariffs could cut FY profit $100mn-$200mn: Baker Hughes


25/04/23
25/04/23

Tariffs could cut FY profit $100mn-$200mn: Baker Hughes

New York, 23 April (Argus) — Oilfield services giant Baker Hughes expects a cut in its annual profit of as much as $200mn from tariffs, if current levels applied under President Donald Trump's 90-day pause stay in place for the rest of the year. That hit to profits does not include secondary effects, such as the impact of Trump's trade wars on slower global economic growth, as well as a renewed bout of weakness in oil prices. While the company is taking steps to mitigate tariff impacts, its "strong weighting" to international markets helps reduce its overall financial exposure, according to chief executive officer Lorenzo Simonelli. Increased oil price volatility due to tariffs , as well as the return of Opec+ barrels to the market, have resulted in a softening outlook for the market. As such, Baker Hughes now expects global upstream spending will be "down by high single digits" this year. The company forecasts a low-double digit decline in North America spending by its clients, and a mid-to-high single digit drop internationally. "A sustained move lower in oil prices or worsening tariffs would introduce further downside risk to this outlook," said Simonelli. "The prospects of an oversupplied oil market, rising tariffs, uncertainty in Mexico and activity weakness in Saudi Arabia are collectively constraining international upstream spending levels." The company has identified three areas of tariff exposure within its industrial and energy technology division, including volumes exported to China, critical equipment supplies from its facilities in Italy, and an expected modest impact from steel and aluminum tariffs as well as US-China trade activity. Mitigation efforts include exploring domestic procurement alternatives to reduce input costs and improving its global manufacturing footprint. In relation to its oilfield services and equipment segment, Baker Hughes has been working to boost domestic sourcing and is working with customers to recover some costs. Elsewhere, the repeal of an US LNG permitting moratorium under the Trump administration has resulted in higher orders. Baker Hughes has booked about $1.7bn in LNG orders in the US over the past two quarters, and several LNG customers in the Gulf Coast have signaled plans to expand capacity beyond 2030. Profit of $402mn in the first quarter was down from $455mn in the year-earlier period. Revenue held steady at about $6.4bn. By Stephen Cunningham Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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