US Oil Giants Eye Venezuela Return, Cite Trump Security Pledges

Top executives from major US oil companies have signaled their readiness to invest billions in Venezuela's oil sector, contingent on new security guarantees and political backing from the Trump administration. Chevron's vice chairman stated the company could rapidly increase production from its existing joint ventures in the country. However, leaders from ExxonMobil and others stressed that essential legal and commercial reforms are needed to make the sector investable. The meeting represents a potential shift in strategy, using energy investment as a path forward for Venezuela, whose oil output has collapsed over the past decade.

Key Points: US Oil Majors Ready to Invest Billions in Venezuela

  • Executives cite Trump security guarantees
  • Chevron could boost output immediately
  • Legal reforms called essential
  • Venezuela a long-term resource opportunity
  • Investment hinges on stability
2 min read

US oil majors signal readiness to invest in Venezuela

Top US oil executives signal readiness to invest in Venezuela, citing new security guarantees from the Trump administration as a key condition.

"I think you've given hope to the people of Venezuela again. - Ryan Lance"

Washington, Jan 10

Top executives from major US and international oil companies signaled readiness to invest billions of dollars in Venezuela's oil sector, citing new security guarantees and political backing from the Trump administration as key conditions for reentry.

Speaking at a White House meeting chaired by President Donald Trump, leaders from Chevron, ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips and other firms described Venezuela as a long-term opportunity following years of decline caused by sanctions and infrastructure decay.

Chevron Vice Chairman Mark Nelson said the company already maintained a substantial presence in Venezuela and could rapidly expand operations.

"Today Chevron has 3,000 employees in four different joint ventures in Venezuela," Nelson said, adding that production had increased from roughly 40,000 barrels per day to 240,000 barrels per day.

He said Chevron could "increase our liftings from those joint ventures, 100 percent essentially effective immediately," with further increases possible within 18 to 24 months.

ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods said Venezuela represented a major resource opportunity but stressed that legal and commercial reforms were essential.

"If we look at the legal and commercial constructs and frameworks in place today in Venezuela today, it's uninvestable," Woods said.

He said ExxonMobil was prepared to deploy a technical assessment team within weeks if invited.

"We think it's absolutely critical in the short term that we get a technical team in place to assess the current state of the industry," Woods said.

ConocoPhillips CEO Ryan Lance said Trump's approach of using energy investment rather than prolonged conflict offered a new path forward.

"I think you've given hope to the people of Venezuela again," Lance said.

Halliburton CEO Jeff Miller said the company, which exited Venezuela in 2019 due to sanctions, was eager to return.

"600 Venezuelans with Halliburton today all around the world look forward to putting them back to work," he said.

Trump told executives that participating firms would receive robust security guarantees.

"They will have those guarantees, yes," he said.

Several executives said long-term stability and durable investment protections would determine the pace and scale of investment.

Venezuela once ranked among the world's largest oil producers but has seen output collapse over the past decade due to sanctions, mismanagement and lack of capital investment.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone who follows global energy markets, this is a huge development. Venezuela's reserves are massive. If they can get production back online, it could ease supply concerns worldwide. The key is "durable investment protections" – without that, it's too risky.
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Aditya G
This is pure geopolitics wrapped in business talk. The US wants influence back in its backyard. I'm skeptical about the "hope to the people" line. Will the profits actually reach ordinary Venezuelans or just a few? History isn't very encouraging. 🤔
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Priyanka N
From an Indian perspective, our oil companies should also be looking at such opportunities. ONGC Videsh has experience in tough regions. Diversifying our energy sources is crucial for energy security. But the legal framework has to be solid first.
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Michael C
The numbers are staggering – from 40k to 240k barrels per day just for Chevron. Imagine the scale if all majors return. This could be a game-changer for global oil supply. But the infrastructure decay must be immense. It will take years and billions.
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Neha E
While investment is needed, let's not forget the environmental cost. Venezuela has already suffered. Any new investment must have strong environmental safeguards. We can't just repeat the old model of extract and leave. The world is watching.
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Karthik V

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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