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Who controls Venezuela’s oil now? What Maduro’s arrest means for energy markets

Robert Frost by Robert Frost
January 5, 2026
in Industries
Who controls Venezuela’s oil now? What Maduro’s arrest means for energy markets
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The oil tanker “Minerva Astra” lies at anchor in Maracaibo, Venezuela, as protester with the Venezuelan flag approaches the vessel Dec. 17, 2002.

Andrew Alvarez | Afp | Getty Images

The arrest of Nicolás Maduro has thrown one of the world’s most politically fraught oil industries back into focus, forcing investors to reassess who controls Venezuela’s crude resources and whether they can be meaningfully revived after decades of decline.

For now, the answer may seem straightforward. “Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), the state-owned oil company, controls the majority of the oil production and reserves,” said Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates. 

American energy corporation Chevron operates in the country through its own production and a joint venture with PDVSA, while Russian and Chinese firms also participate through partnerships, though “majority control is still with PDVSA,” Lipow said. 

If Trump is successful in seeing a more pro-U.S. and pro-investment government take shape in Venezuela, Chevron is best placed [to control Venezuelan oil] given the are already well positioned there.

Saul Kavonic

MST Financial

Venezuela nationalized its oil industry in the 1970s, which led to the creation of PDVSA. Oil output peaked at about 3.5 million barrels per day in 1997, but has since plunged to an estimated 950,000 barrels per day, with around 550,000 barrels per day exported, data provided by Lipow Oil Associates showed.

If a more pro-U.S. and pro-investment government takes shape in Venezuela, Chevron would be “best placed” to expand its role, said Saul Kavonic, head of energy research at MST Financial. European companies like Repsol and Eni could also benefit, given their existing positions in Venezuela, he said.

What it means for global oil

Any regime change could disrupt the commercial chain that keeps Venezuelan barrels flowing, industry experts warned.

“Since it is unclear at this time who is in charge in Venezuela, we might see exports completely halt as the buyers don’t know to whom to send the money,” said Lipow. He added that the latest round of U.S. sanctions on a shadow fleet of tankers has severely affected exports, forcing Venezuela to cut production.

The shadow fleet refers to tankers that operate outside traditional shipping, insurance and regulatory systems to move crude from sanctioned countries. These vessels are commonly used to transport oil from nations such as Venezuela, Russia and Iran, which face U.S. restrictions on energy exports.

Lipow expects Chevron to continue exporting 150,000 barrels per day, limiting any immediate supply impact. Still, he said the broader uncertainty could add a short-term risk premium of about $3 per barrel.

That bump would come against a market that many analysts see as adequately supplied, at least for now. “The oil market currently is trending towards oversupply,” Rapidan Energy Group’s Bob McNally said, calling the immediate impact “almost a nothing burger.”

Venezuela’s longer-term importance lies in the type of oil it produces. The country’s heavy, sour crude can be technically challenging to extract, but prized by complex refineries, particularly in the U.S. “American refineries… love to slurp that gunky oil from Venezuela and Canada,” McNally said.

“The real issues are, will the oil industry be able to get back into Venezuela and reverse two decades of dilapidation and neglect and get it back up?”

If a new government led by opposition leader Maria Corina Machado is installed very quickly, sanctions could ease and oil exports could initially rise as stored oil is used to generate revenue, Lipow said. However, a short-term surge could pressure prices, he added.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

Oil prices in the past one year

Still, any notion of a sustained recovery faces hard physical limits. “The Venezuelan oil industry is in such a state of disrepair that even with a change in government, it is unlikely to see any material increase in oil production for years as substantial investments are required to rehabilitate the existing infrastructure,” he noted.

Similarly, RBC’s Helima Croft warned that the path to recovery is long, citing Venezuela’s “decades-long decline under the Chávez and Maduro regimes.” She said that oil executives contend it will cost at least $10 billion annually to turn the sector around, with “a stable security environment” an absolute prerequisite.

“All bets are off in a chaotic change of power scenario like what occurred in Libya or Iraq,” she said.

— CNBC’s Chery Kang and Martin Soong contributed to this report.



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