Venezuela’s PDVSA extends diesel sales in dollars, cutting subsidy

Venezuela’s PDVSA extends diesel sales in dollars, cutting subsidy

Photo: Marco Bello – Reuters

 

Venezuela’s state-run PDVSA has ordered over a hundred stations to begin selling diesel in dollars, reducing a subsidy that had allowed truckers and public transportation drivers to fill their tanks almost for free, according to documents and sources.

By Reuters and 

May 30, 2022

Venezuela had set a diesel retail price of $0.50 per liter in late 2021 for some stations but a parallel system in local currency continued working, allowing most drivers to access the subsidy.





In recent weeks, however, long lines of trucks and buses looking to fill up their tanks at domestic prices led PDVSA to expand the number of stations charging fuel in dollars.

A global tightness in the offer of diesel is pushing prices up and threatening supply during the coming peak demand season in several countries across the Americas.

The new dollar-denominated diesel price was communicated by PDVSA to stations this month, according to a copy of one of the letters seen by Reuters and dated May 26.

“From now on, diesel will be sold at the same price as gasoline,” a person who received one of the letters said.

PDVSA and Venezuela’s oil ministry did not immediately reply to requests for comment.

A prohibition on fuel supplies to Venezuela as part of U.S. sanctions on PDVSA, as well as decades of poor maintenance and underinvestment at its refining network, are making it hard for the company to meet demand for gasoline, diesel and cooking gas, which is returning to pre-pandemic levels.

Read More: Reuters – Venezuela’s PDVSA extends diesel sales in dollars, cutting subsidy

La Patilla in English