Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Get In Touch
    • About Us
    Trending
    • Social Security Claiming Age 70 Wins, But One Group Should Not Wait
    • ARK Invest SpaceX Purchases Top $32M as Wood Buys the Dip
    • The Fast-Fashion Balance Sheet , The Terrifying Debt Load Powering the Web’s Biggest Retail Giants
    • The Circular Economy Isn’t Just an Environmental Idea Anymore — It’s a $4 Trillion Business Opportunity
    • ATO Holiday Home Tax Ruling TR 2026/1 , If You Keep the Peak Weeks for Yourself, the Tax Man Has a Problem With That
    • Hims Stock Down 55% From Its Peak — But the Telehealth Company Is Still Worth $7 Billion. Here’s Why
    • JPM Stock Near All-Time Highs at $331 — Is the World’s Most Profitable Bank Running Out of Room to Run?
    • WDC Stock Just Hit an All-Time High of $729 — The Data Storage Giant Nobody Was Talking About a Year Ago
    Radio TandilRadio Tandil
    • Home
    • Finance
    • Business
    • Stock Market
    • News
    • Spanish News
      • Opiniones
      • Negocios
      • Deporte
      • Noticias Internacionales
    Saturday, June 27
    Radio TandilRadio Tandil
    You are at:Home » The Venezuelan Processing Boom: How a US Refinery Became the Pivot Point for South American Oil
    The Venezuelan Processing Boom
    The Venezuelan Processing Boom
    News

    The Venezuelan Processing Boom: How a US Refinery Became the Pivot Point for South American Oil

    Radio TandilBy Radio Tandil7 May 2026No Comments4 Mins Read26 Views
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    The late afternoon light catches the navy and burgundy hull of the Minerva Gloria as it sits low in the water at a wharf in the Mississippi Sound. It appears to be just another tanker drifting through the Gulf from a distance. However, its cargo—400,000 barrels of Venezuelan crude—tells a different story.

    Less than a year ago, such a shipment would have been unimaginable on American soil. Even though the men loading hoses and checking gauges take it for granted, there’s a feeling that something quietly important is taking place here while strolling along the dock.

    SubjectThe Pascagoula Refinery & the US-Venezuela Oil Corridor
    OperatorChevron Corporation
    Refinery LocationPascagoula, Mississippi, Gulf of Mexico
    Refinery CapacityAmong the largest US refineries; designed for heavy, sour crude
    Current Venezuelan Imports~250,000 barrels/day (Chevron share); industry total ~284,000 bpd
    Source CountryVenezuela — holder of the world’s largest proven oil reserves
    State Oil ProducerPDVSA (Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A.)
    Key Tanker CitedMinerva Gloria — 820 ft, 400,000-barrel cargo
    Trading Houses LicensedVitol, Trafigura
    Pre-Sanctions Volume (2019)~500,000 bpd to the United States
    Pricing Discount~$9.50/barrel below Brent benchmark
    US Refineries Suited to Heavy CrudeRoughly 70% of total US refining capacity

    Given how little of that oil reached the United States during the Maduro era, Venezuela has long held the largest proven oil reserves in the world, a claim that has always seemed a little ridiculous. The taps were largely closed due to mismanagement, sanctions, and a failing state oil industry. Then came the January nighttime raid, the US forces’ capture of Nicolás Maduro, and the sudden revision of the regulations. For the first time since September of last year, Venezuelan crude exports surpassed one million barrels per day by March. It remains to be seen if that pace continues.

    The man in charge of Chevron’s Pascagoula refinery, Tim Potter, recounts the event with the kind of subdued zeal that professional oilmen typically prefer. He remarks, “It’s a big deal not only for Chevron but the entire Gulf region,” as he stands in the shadow of a complex that was, in a way, designed for just this. Decades ago, the refinery was designed to handle heavy, sour crude, which is the thick, sulfurous substance that comes out of Venezuelan wells and needs to be coaxed to flow. This type of equipment is not necessary for lighter oils. Pascagoula does.

    The Venezuelan Processing Boom
    The Venezuelan Processing Boom

    Currently, Chevron imports about 250,000 barrels per day on average. According to Andy Walz, the company’s downstream president, that number could increase by another 50%. On paper, the economics make sense. Because it is challenging, Venezuelan crude is inexpensive, and a refinery built for challenges converts that discount into margin. One of those structural facts that seldom makes headlines but subtly influences everything is that about 70% of US refining capacity actually operates best on heavier grades.

    However, the image isn’t as neat as the corporate language implies. According to reports, trading companies like Vitol and Trafigura, which were both given licenses following the supply agreement with interim president Delcy Rodríguez, are having trouble finding enough customers. One trader stated, “We’re all facing this issue where there’s more to place and not enough takers,” pointing out that some Gulf Coast refiners continue to favor Canadian heavy grades because they arrive free of political baggage. Compared to the $6 to $7.50 discount observed in mid-January, Venezuelan cargoes are currently offered at about $9.50 below Brent. In other words, the market is discovering its level through hardship.

    The disconnect can be seen a few miles from the Pascagoula plant. David McQueen, a retired Vietnam veteran on social security, fills up his tank at a Chevron station without trying to hide his annoyance. “I hate it,” he declares. “The price has got to go down because I’m going down with it.” He thinks that someone is sitting on supply somewhere, which may not be unreasonable. A woman named Donna spends thirty dollars one pump over and says she doesn’t see her grandchildren as much these days. “You gotta do what you gotta do.”

    The contrast between the strategic narrative—tankers, sanctions lifted, refineries humming—and the modest, unglamorous reality at the pump is difficult to ignore. Mark Lashier, the CEO of Phillips 66, stated this week that his company could process up to 250,000 barrels per day of Venezuelan crude, but only if the price remains competitive. The word “competitive” is working hard. The following year will likely determine whether Pascagoula continues to be the center of this entire arrangement or if the boom gradually spreads throughout the Gulf.

    Boom Venezuelan
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleThe Battery Metal Shortage: How the US-China Trade War is Quietly Strangling EV Production
    Next Article How the Carried Interest Loophole Survives Every Tax Reform and Saves Private Equity Billions Annually
    Radio Tandil
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Cursor Stock Explained , Why the AI Coding Tool Worth $60 Billion Has No Ticker Symbol You Can Buy

    17 June 2026

    The Debt Is $39 Trillion and Washington Still Can’t Agree on What That Actually Means

    16 June 2026

    The Central Bank Divergence , Why the Fed and the Bank of England Are Heading in Opposite Directions

    16 June 2026

    Comments are closed.

    24 June 2026

    Social Security Claiming Age 70 Wins, But One Group Should Not Wait

    The Social Security claiming age you choose permanently sets your monthly benefit, and a National…

    ARK Invest SpaceX Purchases Top $32M as Wood Buys the Dip

    The Fast-Fashion Balance Sheet , The Terrifying Debt Load Powering the Web’s Biggest Retail Giants

    The Circular Economy Isn’t Just an Environmental Idea Anymore — It’s a $4 Trillion Business Opportunity

    © 2026 Radio Tandil
    • Get In Touch
    • About Us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.