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Reuters Piece on US/Venezuela: What could Maduro offer Trump in potential talks? Oil
Posted on 11/25/25 at 8:51 am
Posted on 11/25/25 at 8:51 am
quote:
HOUSTON, Nov 25 (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has the flexibility and the incentive to offer crude oil cargoes, which the country mostly sells to China, as a bargaining chip if Venezuela were to hold negotiations with the United States.
U.S. President Donald Trump's administration, which has boosted its military presence in the Caribbean, has said he is open to talks with Maduro, whose government has struggled to lure foreign investment in the country's oilfields amid U.S. sanctions.
The U.S. on Monday formally designated Venezuela's Cartel de los Soles a foreign terrorist organization, increasing pressure on Maduro amid preparations to launch further operations in the coming days, according to sources.
OPEC member Venezuela's oil production has stabilized around 1.1 million barrels per day this year, less than a third of its all-time high in the late 1990s. More than 80% of exports were shipped to China between June and October, according to shipping data.
Those cargoes, alongside possible operating licenses for U.S. companies, could be Maduro's best leverage in any talks, analysts say.
"Sending more oil to the U.S. and protecting U.S. investment in Venezuela is something Maduro can easily offer," said energy analyst Thomas O'Donnell. However, the offer "might not be enough now that Washington has the upper hand," he said, referring to the oil market's current stability and low prices.
Venezuela's Oil Minister Delcy Rodriguez said on Monday the U.S. has targeted Venezuela because of its vast crude reserves.
"They want Venezuela’s oil and gas reserves. For nothing, without paying," she said, having previously noted U.S. Gulf refiners' demand for Venezuela's heavy crude grades. The U.S. mainly produces light oil.
quote:
Washington has for years blocked cash payments to PDVSA, but the oil company has vast experience with oil swaps that allow it to exchange its crude for much-needed fuel imports.
Venezuela's oil shipments to China have increased in the second half of 2025 to more than 80% of total exports, mainly due to U.S. policies preventing exports to other destinations, compared with 63% all of last year, according to LSEG tanker movement data and internal PDVSA documents seen by Reuters. That leaves room for diversifying the destination of exports.
quote:
Despite having the world's largest crude reserves, Maduro's administration has failed to allocate Venezuela's oilfields to experienced energy firms in recent years under a contract model he proposed, attracting only small investors that are not significantly contributing to the nation's output.
Most Western energy firms are not willing to invest following expropriations of foreign oil assets under former Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez and the U.S. sanctions that followed, or to inject the massive capital required to revive Venezuela's aging energy industry.
LINK
Does Venezuela have to import truck nuts?
This post was edited on 11/25/25 at 9:00 am
Posted on 11/25/25 at 8:53 am to ragincajun03
quote:
Venezuela's Oil Minister Delcy Rodriguez said on Monday the U.S. has targeted Venezuela because of its vast crude reserves.
"They want Venezuela’s oil and gas reserves. For nothing, without paying," she said, having previously noted U.S. Gulf refiners' demand for Venezuela's heavy crude grades. The U.S. mainly produces light oil.
How much do we need their heavy crude, I am guessing far less than they need a stable food supply for their citizens
Posted on 11/25/25 at 8:53 am to ragincajun03
Isn't our domestic production meeting our current demand? Why is cheap foreign oil an attractive bargaining chip for the US?
Trump said he was attacking drug cartels that were killing Americans... Is he gonna sell that out for cheap gas?
Trump said he was attacking drug cartels that were killing Americans... Is he gonna sell that out for cheap gas?
Posted on 11/25/25 at 8:56 am to Tigeralum2008
quote:
Isn't our domestic production meeting our current demand?
No.
U.S. production is currently something like 13.6 million bbls/day, while our domestic demand is around 20 million/day.
Also, and one of our downstream experts can better explain, many of our refineries prefer, or at least do better vs. the world market processing, the heavier crudes as opposed to the lighter stuff that's produced in the U.S.
Posted on 11/25/25 at 8:58 am to ragincajun03
quote:
More than 80% of exports were shipped to China between June and October, according to shipping data.
Monroe Doctrine.
The U.S. wants China out of our hemisphere.
Posted on 11/25/25 at 8:58 am to Tigeralum2008
You'll be shocked to learn but it has never been about drug cartels.
The key note of that article is what Venezuela has been selling to China. The US wants/needs to stop that. That is why the embargo was lifted a few months back. Venezuela doesn't need the US buying the crude and we don't like that.
The key note of that article is what Venezuela has been selling to China. The US wants/needs to stop that. That is why the embargo was lifted a few months back. Venezuela doesn't need the US buying the crude and we don't like that.
Posted on 11/25/25 at 9:00 am to fightin tigers
quote:
You'll be shocked to learn but it has never been about drug cartels.
Posted on 11/25/25 at 9:01 am to Sassafrasology
quote:
The U.S. wants China out of our hemisphere
Do they? How many members of congress are on the dole with China?
Posted on 11/25/25 at 9:11 am to ragincajun03
Wait, you're telling me that a proposed US military action against a country with a different form of government than ours is actually about getting us access to their resources, and the alleged threat to our national security is just window dressing?
No way! There's literally no historical precedent for such a thing
No way! There's literally no historical precedent for such a thing
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