Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), Venezuela's state-owned oil company, was hit by a cyberattack over the weekend that disrupted its export operations.
In a Monday statement, PDVSA denied that the Saturday morning incident affected its operations in any way, adding that the breach was limited to some administrative systems.
"Thanks to the expertise of PDVSA's human talent, the operational areas were not affected in any way, with the attack being limited to its administrative system," the company said.
"Therefore, the industry's operational continuity is maintained through the implementation of secure protocols that allow for its regular activities in the supply of products to the domestic market, as well as the fulfillment of all its export commitments."
However, according to an internal memo seen by Bloomberg, PDVSA instructed operational and administrative staff to disconnect from the network and shut down their computers.
Three sources familiar with the situation also told Bloomberg that systems on PDVSA's network that manage the country's main crude terminal were still offline on Monday.
This was confirmed by Reuters in a report citing an inside source who said, "There's no delivery (of cargoes), all systems are down."
PDVSA statement (Karen Méndez)
This cyberattack comes amid escalating tensions between Venezuela and the United States. Last week, U.S. authorities seized a sanctioned oil tanker with Venezuelan crude, the first such seizure since the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned PDVSA in January 2019.
In its Monday statement, PDVSA also blamed the United States and domestic conspirators for orchestrating the attack as part of an attempt "to undermine national stability."
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