Trinidad to Send Gasoline to Venezuela
Published Monday, December 30, 2002 The Associated Press
PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad - Trinidad's state-owned oil company will ship some 300,000 barrels of gasoline on New Year's Day to Venezuela, officials said Monday.
The arrangement is part of a commercial arrangement between both countries to trade crude oil for refined products, said Oliver Flaks, spokesman for Trinidad's state-owned oil company Petrotrin. The shipment is not related to an ongoing general strike in Venezuela, Flaks said.
The 4-week-old strike aimed at toppling President Hugo Chavez has shut down key sectors of the economy and created gasoline and food shortages throughout Venezuela, the world's No. 5 exporter. Oil production has plunged from 3 million barrels a day to 260,000 barrels a day.
The gasoline will be a payment for 500,000 barrels of crude oil worth $15 million, which Petroleos de Venezuela, S.A. already delivered to Trinidad, he said.
At current market prices, the $15 million will amount to 300,000 barrels, but the precise amount to be shipped will depend on the price of gasoline on Jan. 1, Flaks said.
Petrotrin "will continue to ensure that the supply of refined products to its trading partners is maintained," the company said.
Flaks said he did not know the name of the ship that will transport the gas or where it will dock.
The Venezuelan oil company will supply the ship and make the landing, so Petrotrin is not involved in the shipping of the gasoline, he said.