"The shipyard received 30.34 million euros to settle the outstanding debt for tanker Arita," and another 1.99 million euros went in August to pay accumulated demurrage fees, the document said.
Both the Arita and the second tanker, recently renamed Anita, faced long delays to begin navigating amid the unpaid debts and PDVSA maritime arm's struggles to secure insurance and seaworthy classifications. The Arita - now renamed Colon - first set sail in 2017 but was later arrested by a vessel operator over unpaid bills. It was returned to PDVSA in 2019 and has mostly remained in Venezuelan waters since.
The Anita departed Iran in late December carrying an Iranian condensate cargo for PDVSA, one of the sources said. It has not yet arrived in Venezuela, according to tanker tracking services. Two separate vessels chartered by Iran's Naftiran Intertrade Company (NICO), the supertankers Wen Yao and Sea Cliff, also are expected to deliver Iranian condensate to Venezuela this month as part of an oil swap with PDVSA, according to monitoring firm TankerTrackers.com. The Sea Cliff was seen near PDVSA's Jose port on Monday, TankerTrackers.com said. By the end of the contract, PDVSA will have paid Iran about 157 million euros for the four vessels, according to the proposal. The deal was first announced in 2006 with much fanfare by Tehran and the government of then-President Hugo Chavez. Some of the vessels to be handed over by Iran could be operated by third parties, according to one person. The document did not detail delivery dates for the two tankers to come. PDVSA and SADRA did not reply to requests for comment. Iran's and Venezuela's oil sectors are under U.S. sanctions that make it difficult to obtain services for vessels built or sailing under those countries' flags, and expose the ships' cargoes to the risk of seizures and retentions.
Washington has in recent years expanded the list of blacklisted tankers linked to Iran and Venezuela, and imposed sanctions on their state oil companies and their maritime arms. ($1 = 0.9375 euros) (Reporting by Mircely Guanipa in Punto Fijo and Marianna Parraga in Houston Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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