Dramatic illustration of Pemex oil tanker canceled for Cuba amid US pressure, showing Mexico's port and Cuba's blackout crisis.
Dramatic illustration of Pemex oil tanker canceled for Cuba amid US pressure, showing Mexico's port and Cuba's blackout crisis.
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Pemex Cancels Mid-January Oil Shipment to Cuba Amid Intensifying US Pressure

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Mexico's state oil company Pemex has canceled a crude oil shipment to Cuba scheduled for late January 2026, as the US escalates efforts to cut off fuel supplies to the island following its January 3 capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro. The decision heightens Cuba's energy crisis, with the country relying heavily on Mexican imports amid chronic blackouts and isolation.

Pemex removed the mid-January shipment—set to load on the Panama-flagged Swift Galaxy and arrive in Cuba by month's end—from its delivery calendar, as reported by Bloomberg on January 27, 2026. No official reason was provided, with Mexican energy sources citing crude availability, logistics, and market conditions. However, the cancellation aligns with mounting US pressure on allies to halt support for Cuba.

The move follows US President Donald Trump's social media post stating, “there will be no more oil or money for Cuba: zero,” issued nearly two weeks prior. US Energy Secretary Chris Wright initially indicated the policy would permit Mexico's shipments, but Reuters reports Mexico is now evaluating whether to maintain, reduce, or suspend deliveries amid fears of Trump administration reprisals. Politico notes the White House is considering invoking the Helms-Burton Act to blockade Cuba's oil imports, while US Navy drones have intensified surveillance over Gulf of Mexico tanker routes.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, in a January 13 call with Trump, denied discussing Cuba and emphasized historic cooperation while offering to mediate US-Cuba talks. She had previously affirmed Mexico's shipments as humanitarian aid amid Cuba's blackouts, food shortages, and fuel scarcity.

Cuba requires at least 110,000 barrels per day but produces only 40,000 barrels of heavy crude domestically, facing blackouts exceeding 40 hours in some provinces. Pemex became Cuba's primary supplier after Venezuela reduced exports due to its own declines, delivering an average of around 20,000 barrels daily in 2024 and 19,200 barrels daily from January to September 2025, with expert Jorge Piñón estimating 8,700 barrels daily over the first 13 months of Sheinbaum's administration. The last delivery arrived January 9 on the Ocean Mariner, carrying 85,000 barrels from Veracruz.

Reactions include thousands marching in Havana before the US embassy to protest the deaths of 32 Cubans in the US operation capturing Maduro. Cuban leader Miguel Díaz-Canel honored them as 'brave fighters,' while US Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned Cuban officials to be concerned. Cuba's isolation deepens as leaders from Argentina, El Salvador, and others back Trump, opposed by Mexico, Brazil, and Colombia.

Neither Pemex nor Mexico's Energy Secretariat has commented officially.

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X discussions on Pemex canceling its January oil shipment to Cuba reflect divided sentiments: many celebrate it as yielding to US pressure from Trump and Rubio against the Cuban dictatorship, sarcastically mock Sheinbaum's sovereignty defense, and criticize past aid draining Pemex; others, including official Pemex posts, affirm it as a sovereign humanitarian decision.

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Protesters marching in Havana streets at night during blackouts caused by fuel crisis, with signs blaming the U.S. blockade.
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Cuba acknowledges running out of fuel reserves amid protests

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Cuba's energy minister Vicente de la O Levy stated the country has no reserves of diesel or fuel oil for its power plants. The situation has caused widespread blackouts and sporadic protests in Havana. President Miguel Díaz-Canel blamed the crisis on the U.S. energy blockade.

The Russian tanker Anatoly Kolodkin, carrying more than 700,000 barrels of crude oil, arrived at Cuba's Matanzas port, 100 kilometers from Havana, on March 30, 2026, and is awaiting unloading. US President Donald Trump stated he has no problem with the delivery, as Cuba needs it to survive. The sanctioned vessel received permission from the US Coast Guard.

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The US capture of Nicolás Maduro in January has triggered an oil blockade on Cuba, leading to cancellations of Canadian trips amid fuel and electricity shortages. Cuban-Canadian journalist Victor Vigas Alvarez argues these disruptions might ultimately benefit Cuba by pressuring the regime for change. He points to human rights abuses and the military's control over tourism revenue.

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