Repsol Announces at the White House that It Is “Ready to Triple” Its Oil Production in Venezuela
16 Articles
16 Articles
Repsol CEO Josu Jon Imaz told US President Donald Trump this Friday that the company is prepared to “invest heavily in Venezuela” and to multiply its crude oil production in the Caribbean country by three, up to approximately 135 thousand barrels a day. “We are ready to invest more in Venezuela. Today we produce 45,000 barrels a day, in total, and we are ready to triple this figure over the next three years, investing heavily in the country,” Im…
Repsol CEO Josu Jon Imaz has transferred the company’s commitment to investing in the oil sector in Venezuela to the White House. “We are ready to invest more in Venezuela and triple production there over the next two or three years,” the Spanish executive said at the meeting organized by US President Donald Trump and the top leaders of the world’s leading oil companies to discuss the sector’s role in rebuilding the energy industry in Venezuela …
Repsol CEO Josu Jon Imaz was this afternoon among the select group of executives quoted by Donald Trump at the White House to discuss the future of the oil sector in Venezuela. In his brief speaking shift, Imaz thanked the President of the United States for “opening the door to a better Venezuela,” referring to his military aggression in which a hundred people died and with which President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, were captured…
Repsol makes clear its intentions at the oil summit held this Friday at the White House. "We are prepared to invest more in Venezuela. We currently produce 45,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day and are ready to triple that figure in two or three years, following its recommendations, provided there is a legal and commercial framework to support that growth," his CEO, Josu Jon Imaz, told Donald Trump. The president of the United States has fulfil…
Josu Jon Imaz translates the commitment to invest 'substantially' in the Latin American country. ...
The White House accelerates the ‘Great Energy Deal’ with Caracas, militarizes freighter control and sits the crude giants — including Repsol — to divide Venezuela’s energy reconstruction
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