Venezuela-owned
Citgo to stop selling gasoline to hundreds of U.S. stations
AP
CARACAS
Petroleumworld.com
07 13 06
Venezuela-owned Citgo Petroleum Corp. has decided to stop distributing
gasoline to 1,800 independently owned U.S. stations, shedding a lackluster
segment of its business while forcing the owners of those stations to
find other suppliers.
While it may create some logistical headaches for gasoline retailers
in the short term, the move should not have any impact on the nation's
overall fuel supply.
Citgo, which is wholly owned by Venezuela's state oil company, currently
has to purchase 130,000 barrels a day from third parties in order to
meet its service contracts at 13,100 Citgo-branded stations across the
U.S. This is less profitable than selling gasoline directly from its
refineries.
Instead, the Houston-based company has decided to sell to retailers
only the 750,000 barrels a day that it produces at three U.S. refineries
in Lake Charles, La., Corpus Christi, Texas and Lemont, Ill., according
to a statement late Tuesday.
As
a result, the Citgo brand will disappear entirely from 10 states and
be less common in four additional states by March 2007, when the change
goes into affect, Citgo spokesman Fernando Garay said Wednesday.
Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez has long claimed that parts of Citgo's business
produce losses for Venezuela and constitute a subsidy for the U.S. economy.
Oil
Minister Rafael Ramirez has also charged that Citgo isn't profitable
enough and that its parent, state-owned Petroleos de Venezuela SA, or
PDVSA, could at some point sell off some of the company's refineries.
Garay said Wednesday he knew of no plans for Citgo to sell its U.S.
refineries.
However,
in a sign of the apparently lucrative relationship between the two companies,
PDVSA announced Wednesday that it has so far earned $400 million in
dividends this year from Citgo.
The
states where Citgo will stop selling gasoline are: Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky,
Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma and South
Dakota. A limited number of stations in Illinois, Texas, Arkansas and
Iowa will also be affected.
Venezuela
is the world's fifth-largest oil exporter and the U.S. is its top buyer.
The United States relied on Venezuela for about 11 percent of its oil
supply in 2005
AP 12 07 06
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