Valero Energy
Valero Energy manufactures petroleum-based and low-carbon liquid transportation fuels and petrochemical products across refineries and renewable fuel facilities in multiple countries.
Company summary from SEC filings (first-party). Federal contract data: USAspending.gov (public).
Obligations by Fiscal Year
U.S. contract obligations per federal fiscal year (Oct–Sep), newest first. Source: USAspending.gov (public).
| Fiscal Year | Obligations | Recipient Entities |
|---|---|---|
| FY2025 | $1.15B | 1 |
| FY2024 | $1.06B | 1 |
| FY2023 | $1.22B | 1 |
Top Recipient Entities (FY2025)
The federal recipient registrations that roll up to Valero Energy, by obligation. This is the “show your work” behind the totals above.
| Recipient | FY Obligations |
|---|---|
| VALERO MARKETING AND SUPPLY CO | $1.15B |
About this data
Obligations are dollars the federal government committed to Valero Energy under awarded U.S. contracts (not grants or loans) in a fiscal year (Oct 1–Sep 30). Totals are summed across the company’s contracting subsidiaries via the federal recipient hierarchy — e.g. brand entities roll up to their public parent. In plain English: a rising federal book is a leading read on government revenue. Year-to-year swings are normal for lumpy, big-ticket programs. Source: USAspending.gov (public).
How much did Valero Energy receive in U.S. federal contracts in FY2025?
Valero Energy was obligated $1.15B in U.S. federal contract awards in FY2025 across 1 recipient entities, per USAspending.gov.
How many years of federal-contract data does Oxford Ledge track for Valero Energy?
Oxford Ledge tracks 3 federal fiscal years of contract obligations for Valero Energy, from FY2023 to FY2025.
What are federal contract obligations?
Obligations are the dollar amounts the U.S. government has committed to a contractor under awarded contracts in a federal fiscal year (October through September). They reflect awards, not necessarily cash disbursed.
Where does this federal-contract data come from?
The figures are from USAspending.gov, the U.S. government's public record of federal spending, aggregated to the contractor's public-company parent.