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At White House Meeting, Oil Majors Withhold Big Venezuela Commitments

Executives said Venezuela remains uninvestable without legal reforms, sanctions relief and credible security guarantees.

Overview

  • President Trump urged companies to put at least $100 billion into reviving Venezuela’s oil sector, but industry leaders offered no large, immediate investment pledges.
  • ExxonMobil’s Darren Woods called the country "uninvestable" under current legal and commercial frameworks, while ConocoPhillips highlighted the need for debt restructuring and financing plans; Chevron, the only U.S. operator there, voiced caution.
  • The administration said it will market Venezuelan crude, sell it to U.S. refineries and others, and place proceeds in U.S.-controlled accounts as U.S. forces continue seizing tankers tied to sanctioned oil.
  • Some independent producers signaled readiness to engage, and officials said near‑term output gains of a few hundred thousand barrels per day are feasible if sanctions are eased and operating conditions improve.
  • Attendees from roughly 14–17 firms, along with senior Cabinet officials, discussed potential security assurances and possible Export‑Import Bank credit support, but timelines, legal guarantees and financing remain unresolved.