China’s Refineries Ditch Venezuelan Crude as Soaring Prices Meet U.S. Sanctions Squeeze

Refiners hit the brakes on Venezuelan imports—price spikes and geopolitical blockades force a strategic pivot.
The Sanctions Calculus
U.S. pressure meets market reality. When the cost of navigating a blockade outweighs the discount on the barrel, the trade flow stops. It's not just policy; it's pure arithmetic. Refineries aren't in the business of political statements—they're in the business of margins.
Finding New Streams
So where does the crude come from now? The scramble is on. Alternative suppliers are getting a fresh look, with long-term contracts being re-evaluated overnight. It's a global reshuffle, one tanker at a time. Infrastructure built for specific grades now faces an adaptability test.
The Ripple Effect
This isn't isolated. It strains global supply chains, tweaks regional pricing benchmarks, and sends procurement teams back to the drawing board. One nation's sourcing headache becomes another's opportunity, in a classic zero-sum dance for resources. Another day, another reminder that in global commodities, loyalty lasts as long as the cheapest delivery option.
Market maneuvers in the face of friction—ultimately, every blockade just creates a more expensive detour, paid for by the end consumer. Classic finance: solving a political problem with a premium.
Buyers hold off as floating storage builds up
Merey is mostly used for making bitumen. But China’s construction slowdown is keeping that demand low. Refiners are stocked up, so they can afford to wait for prices to fall again. There’s no rush to buy when storage is full and outlook is soft.
They also have a backup plan. Tankers carrying 82 million barrels of sanctioned oil, including Venezuelan, are sitting off the coasts of China and Malaysia. That’s data from Kpler. It’s enough to act as a cushion if U.S. pressure tightens even more. If shipments dry up, that floating stockpile will be first in line.
The current supply crunch goes deeper than prices. It’s also political. President Nicolás Maduro was captured over the weekend in a U.S. operation that threw the whole game board into the air.
Brent ROSE to nearly $62 per barrel, jumping 1.7% the day after his arrest. Markets are betting this shake-up means Venezuela could return to oil production, if the U.S. gets its way.
Washington wants someone new in charge. And they’ve already picked their favorite: Delcy Rodríguez. She’s been Maduro’s No. 2 and served as oil minister.
Executives, lawyers, and oil lobbyists pushed her name hard to U.S. officials, saying she’s the best option to restart the sector. They claim she’s got the right mix of insider knowledge and business ties to make it work.
Rodríguez takes office as oil players seek U.S. sanctions relief
A source allegedly said, “Delcy has always been the one we dealt with. If anyone can get production running again, it’s her.” That same source said top oil executives told the TRUMP administration she’s the only realistic option to restore output quickly and reopen China’s buying.
Trump’s advisors came to the same conclusion. They believe Rodríguez can cut deals, stabilize the economy, and connect the private sector to the state faster than opposition leader María Corina Machado ever could.
Rodríguez, now sworn in as acting president by the National Assembly, gave a fiery speech on Saturday. She called Maduro’s capture a “kidnapping” and demanded his return. But insiders say the speech was just cover, meant to protect her from backlash while she quietly locks down control.
Chevron, the only U.S. oil firm still operating in Venezuela, said it had “no advance notice of the recent operation” and had “no discussions with administration officials.” A spokesperson said the company is still running in full compliance with local rules and American law.
Still, companies want things to move fast. The pressure is on the Trump team to lift sanctions now so Rodríguez can actually deliver. “There is no time to waste,” one source said. In December, Venezuela had to shut down some wells because there was nowhere left to store oil blocked from export. If this continues, Rodríguez risks losing whatever grip she’s managed to get.
There are fears that more shut-ins could crash production even further, wreck the economy, and weaken Rodríguez before she even starts. But so far, she seems to be gaining ground. She’s using Maduro’s old network to keep things running, at least for now.
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