Venezuela’s oil exports jump to highest since 2018, with more sales to US, India

May 1 (Reuters) – Venezuela’s oil exports rose ​14% to 1.23 million barrels per day ‌in April, the highest in more than seven years, fueled by more sales to the United States, India and ​Europe, shipping data and documents from state ​company PDVSA showed on Friday.

The South American country ⁠has been draining oil inventories and recovering crude ​output in recent months following the U.S. capture of ​President Nicolas Maduro in January, which led to a flagship supply pact between the governments of U.S. President Donald Trump ​and Venezuela’s interim President Delcy Rodriguez.

The agreement, ​coupled with U.S. licenses easing sanctions on the country, has allowed ‌PDVSA’s ⁠joint-venture partners and trading houses including Vitol and Trafigura to receive cargoes from the state firm for sales to refiners in the U.S., Europe ​and Asia.

In April, ​a total ⁠of 66 vessels departed from Venezuelan waters, compared with 61 ships that ​carried 1.08 million bpd of crude and ​refined ⁠products in March, according to the data, based on tanker movements.

The April average is the highest monthly ⁠volume ​since late 2018, before U.S. ​sanctions were imposed on Venezuela’s energy industry.

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