According to the Bloomberg agency, despite the sanctions that weigh on the Chavist regime by the United States, the Department of the Treasury had granted two licenses to the expert company in electrical issues to carry out the corresponding work for the recovery of the electrical networks in our country
The German company Siemens Energy denied that there are talks or official agreements with the administration of Nicolás Maduro to undertake a supposed recovery plan for the National Electric System (SEN) in Venezuela.
Through a statement, the international company, with its communications coordinator for Venezuela and Colombia, Eliana Rivera Giraldo, as spokesperson, assured that to date there has been no rapprochement between the two parties, as it had told the Bloomberg news agency. Eric Sotowho is the commercial manager of Siemens in our nation.
“Siemens Energy is willing to collaborate with the reconstruction of the country’s electrical system, always within the legal framework and the necessary authorizations due to sanctions. To date, we have not had conversations or agreements for any particular case,” outlined the document sent in response to a query made by the Runrunes media.
At the end of August, Soto assured that the German electrical technology organization had signed contracts with the Chavista government to work on the gas and diesel generation facilities that serve Caracas and those that supply electricity to the infrastructure used by the industry. oil tanker
Bloomberg It had even published that, despite the economic sanctions that prevail over the official administration by the United States, the Treasury Department had granted two licenses to Siemens to carry out the corresponding work in the electrical field.
One of these permits, according to what was outlined on that date by that agency, would allow the company to work in thermoelectric plants in the state of Miranda and sell and repair components in power plants owned by Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA).
The Maduro government has not commented on this issue.
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