
Why American Big Oil isnât buying the Venezuela âvictoryâ
Why American Big Oil isnât buying the Venezuela âvictoryâ Everything has gone beautifully in Donald Trumpâs Venezuela operation. An alleged narcoterrorist dictator was captured and brought to justice in a New York court, and the planetâs biggest oil wealth is now owned by the US. At least, according to Trump himself. âWeâre in the oil business,â he said after declaring billions of dollarsâ worth of Venezuelan crude was now heading to the US. âYou donât talk to the Venezuelans, you talk to me,â he told Big Oil executives who gathered in the White House last week. The trouble is, Big Oil doesnât see it that way. The chief executives of ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips are not rushing back into Venezuela. Trump called the oil chiefs to the White House last Friday to urge them to invest $100 billion in upgrading Venezuelaâs petroleum and gas industries. Decades of US economic sanctions are reckoned to have caused the countryâs industrial infrastructure to deteriorate. Venezuelaâs oil industry was nationalized between 2004 and 2007 by former socialist President Hugo Chavez. This policy continued under his successor, Nicolas Maduro, who was kidnapped on January 3 when US special forces raided his residence in Caracas. After Venezuelaâs oil industry was nationalized and run by state-owned Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), the US oil giants Exxon and Conoco quit operations in the country. They later sued in US courts, which ruled that Venezuela owes them $13 billion in expropriated assets. The third biggest US oil company, Chevron, continued to do business in Venezuela in partnership with PDVSA. At the White House oil summit last week, Exxon and Conoco executives told Trump that they were not ready to return to Venezuela because of the risk to investment. Exxon boss Darren Woods described Venezuela as âuninvestable.â Woods said: âWe have a very long history in Venezuela... Weâve had our assets seized there twice. You can imagine to reâenter a third time would require some pretty significant changes from what weâve historically seen here and what is currently the state.â He added: âIf we look at the legal and commercial constructs and frameworks in place today in Venezuela, today itâs uninvestable. And so significant changes have to be made to those commercial frameworks, the legal system, there has to be durable investment protections, and there has to be a change to the hydrocarbon laws in the country.â The Exxon CEOâs comments were echoed by Conocoâs boss, Ryan Lance, who said: âWe need to be also thinking about even restructuring the entire Venezuelan energy system, including PDVSA.â What that means is that Venezuela is far from under US control. Maduro may have been abducted, but the Venezuelan government continues under interim President Delcy Rodriguez and the same administration as when Maduro was in office. Rodriguez and her top aides, including Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino, have condemned the US aggression and are demanding the safe return of Maduro and his wife. Venezuela has not collapsed, nor has its socialist government been overthrown. The scores...
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