Trump Wants Oil Companies To 'Fix' Venezuela's Infrastructure
That's easier said than done.
Over the weekend, American military forces arrested Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro and his wife during an operation in the capital city of Caracas. While the action was nominally undertaken to prosecute Maduro and his wife for "narcoterrorism," President Donald Trump soon added another potential justification: accessing the country's generous oil reserves.
If this is Trump's plan, it will be easier said than done.
"We're going to have our very large United States oil companies, the biggest anywhere in the world, go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure, the oil infrastructure, and start making money for the country," Trump said in remarks after the raid.
Venezuela has the largest proven oil reserves of any country in the world, outstripping the U.S. and even Saudi Arabia, but it refines and exports considerably less than either country. In part, this is because Venezuela lacks the technology to do so, and it has historically relied on American and European oil companies. But in 2007, Maduro's predecessor, Hugo Chávez, nationalized the industry and terminated all agreements with foreign oil companies, many of which then left the country.
"White House and State Department officials have told U.S. oil executives in recent weeks that they would need to return to Venezuela quickly and invest significant capital in the country to revive the damaged oil industry if they wanted compensation for assets expropriated by Venezuela two decades ago," Reuters reported.
Democrats have criticized the cravenness of Trump's proposal. "This was about oil and Wall Street," said Sen. Chris Murphy (D–Conn.). Rep. Ro Khanna (D–Calif.) deemed the military action a "regime change war for oil."
To be clear, Trump's invasion was almost certainly illegal. But even if oil was his primary rationale, asking companies to fix Venezuela for him is not so simple.
"American oil executives are unlikely to dive headfirst into Venezuela for multiple reasons: The situation on the ground remains very uncertain, Venezuela's oil industry is in shambles and Caracas has a history of seizing US oil assets," reported CNN's Matt Egan.
"A handful of Western producers with operations or deals in place in Venezuela could ramp up relatively quickly if the political conditions were right," The New York Times' Rebecca F. Elliot wrote. "But a more substantial revitalization of the country's flagging oil and gas industry most likely would take years and tens of billions of dollars in investment."
On Monday, Trump told NBC News any oil companies that took part in the revitalization would "get reimbursed," potentially by the American taxpayers. But even with the prospect of free money, there is reason to hesitate.
When Bloomberg asked in November if Exxon would be "interested in oil and gas assets in Venezuela if they were to open up," CEO Darren Woods was noncommittal: "We'd have to see what the economics look like. So I wouldn't put it on the list or take it off the list."
Now, with Maduro ousted and the prospect of Venezuela opening up, the economics are decidedly unfavorable. The year-over-year price of crude oil is down over 20 percent; prices have fallen even further since Maduro's capture.
"U.S. oil prices are languishing below $60 a barrel, a level that discourages investment for most American producers," The Wall Street Journal explained. "Global supplies are expected to continue rising this year."
"The International Energy Agency predicts that supply will exceed demand in 2026 by an astounding 3.85 million barrels per day, the equivalent of around 4% of global demand," Jeffrey Sonnenfeld wrote at TIME. "Plus, OPEC production is soaring, Chinese energy stockpiles are filled, Saudi Arabia plans to increase their oil output by a third, and the oil stored on tankers has risen in recent weeks to its highest point since April 2020, when consumption tanked as a result of COVID-19 pandemic shutdowns."
In other words, if Trump hoped to have American companies shoulder the burden of fixing Venezuela's oil infrastructure for him, he could hardly have picked a worse time.
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Things that are easy normally aren’t worth doing.
Right. It's been an entire year now and Doge still hasn't paid off the national debt.
Not so sure about that. I do lots of easy things that need to get done. Better to say "many things worth doing are not easy".
What none of these articles ever do is acknowledge that if they pick their experts, they pick the outcome of the article. I'm virtually certain Lancaster knows jack about oil production, so he would have to consult people who do, but if all he does is consult people who will spit out his preferred narrative, that really doesn't get us closer to the truth. Just what Lancaster wants the truth to be.
His references in the article are: Chris Murphy, Ro Khanna, CNN, the New York Times, NBC News, Bloomberg, the Wall Street Journal and Time Magazine. An extremely diverse lot politically to be sure.
You just described all modern Reason staff written articles except maybe for Good Liz.
Man, nation building... again.
That said, Donald Trump (as opposed to Bernie Sanders or Hillary Clinton or Joe Biden or Mark Cuban or Jack Dorsey or Bill Gates...) nation-building in an arguably Western, Judeo-Christian culture rather than Afghanistan or Iraq.
Once again, he's not a libertarian and never claimed to be. Given the facts, hopefully he's better than W. He's certainly done more to stack the deck in his favor.
Or, once again, Trump's status quo beats the fuck out of Canada, Australia, Germany, the UK, and the rest of the left half of the EU's status quo.
Well if Trump is successful in rebuilding Venezuela's oil infrastructure and a democratic government is reestablished the obvious beneficiaries will be the Venezuelans. He wants the same in Gaza. Compare that to Libya. Joe thinks that's craven. This is a very complex situation with a lot of moving parts but there is no question that Venezuela and the western hemisphere will be much better off with a functioning oil infrastructure and without Maduro. Just shrieking "blood for oil" is a really retarded argument.
Just shrieking "blood for oil" is a really retarded argument.
Yeah. If anything, cries of "blood for oil" now only reinforces the idea that they didn't oppose the ME wars as much as they just opposed Neocons because they were too moderate and/or had an (R) after their name.
Especially after the intervening GND and the collective ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ over Ukraine and NS1 and 2... the cheers of "From the river to the sea" on the Columbia University campus... cries of "blood for oil" in response to this signify that, once again, they don't really care about shedding blood or starving people or cheap oil or keeping people from freezing to death.
It's like Deion Sanders saying Shedeur's draft slide was because of racism.
What blood? We had no casualties. So now we just get the oil.
I once toured the Lago de Maracaibo oil field by boat. Miles of rigs in an average of about ten feet of water. I no longer work for the oil company that had the contract to develop and operate that oild field, but the logistics back then, even with a "friendly" government, were a nightmare. The hotel in Caracas where our delegation stayed was surrounded by security police armed with machine pistols and all of the private homes there had ten foot high walls topped with razor wire and automatic steel gates. I was there to inspect the contract medical facilities where our expats and their families would get their medical care.
I know people from those oil companies - including those who worked for years and even decades in Venezuela. None of them have the slightest interest in going back and spending a single penny on their own. Certainly not with the government that Trump has now 'imposed' to 'run the place' as his agent.
And that 300 billion barrels is all paper oil. It was invented when oil was at $150 per barrel so that VZ could get higher production quotas from OPEC. In 2007, it was 100 billion barrels. In 2008, it was 172 billion. In 2009, it was 211 billion barrels. By 2014, it was 300 billion barrels. All without any exploration. At $55 per barrel it doesn't exist. More production at that price will kill off US production of oil at that price - meaning that Trump wants' taxpayers (not really - children and grandchildren) to pay foreign oil companies to trash domestic oil production so that he can win a midterm election on 'gasoline affordability' (which is already very affordable because there's a fucking surplus). And there will be no increased production until all the VZ bondholders get made whole (price rose from 20c on the dollar a couple months ago to 45c on the dollar today and looking for par) which is why Wall St is giddy about the idea.
President 'I'm from NY and FL and I know everything about oil' Trump to the rescue of the soybean farmers neighbors in flyover country.
Like everything else Trump says there is no "there" there. He throws stuff at the wall to see what sticks. He mouths pronouncements only to deny them an hour later. I have never been interested in anything other than his actions. I do not approve of ninety percent of those actions and am still waiting to see what happens longer term on the other ten percent.
That's funny. I know people in that industry too, and they are very excited about it. Maybe you should talk to executives and not roughnecks or the janitors.
Oh please do tell me what companies those stupid executives with too much money to waste work for. I'm always looking for easy shorts.
Your pessimism explains the recent rise in chevron stock.
HAHAHA. CVX GAPPED up on Mon and closed down on the day. And closed the gap down today. Money has LEFT the stock. Retail (buy high and hold the bag) getting fleeced by headlines again. You should probably learn a lesson.
Savvy investors look for more of a trend than 2 days
https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/CVX/
Savvy investors would know that the 300 billion barrels is bullshit. And that a Trump announcement is no easy cure for endemic corruption, Dutch disease, the resource curse, a leftist government, or a rentier state. VZ just happens to have all five.
OTOH - politically connected DC insiders bought in the last couple weeks - and SOLD with the news on Mon and Tue.
If you say so.
'Democrats have criticized the cravenness of Trump's proposal. "This was about oil and Wall Street," said Sen. Chris Murphy (D–Conn.). Rep. Ro Khanna (D–Calif.) deemed the military action a "regime change war for oil."'
Of course Democrats hate this plan. Let's see if from their perspective (and doctrine):
1. Oil is evil, evil, evil. Fossil fuels have already killed the planet, and Greta, at least 10 times. How many more extinctions can we survive?
2. Corporations are evil, evil, evil. Capitalism has oppressed people since some cave guy demanded a pointy stick in exchange for part of the mastodon he killed.
3. Oil companies are the worst of all possible combined evils.
4. The only reason the US would ever interfere with another nation is to steal their stuff, right? Except of course to fuck with their government and society in order to bring enlightenment to the masses.
5. TDS
Pointing out the lameness of the Democrats does nothing to prop up the lameness of the Republicans. Whether you like Trump or his actions, many many people will admire his willingness to take action. I think his intention to run Venezuela for the benefit of the Venezuelan people is empty rhetoric while making a lovely soundbite for the "news" media. His assertion that American oil companies will revitalize the Venezuelan oil industry is not only baseless but silly on its face. Call it TDS if you like - that too is pointless.
Oil companies would be foolish to invest a penny in Venezuela ever again.
If anyone, including Democrats, wants to criticize or challenge anyone, including Trump, then they need to offer evidence and rational argument.
In this case Democrats spewed out the same ideological tripe they always think is profound and persuasive. And they deserve to get shit on.
oil companies built Venezuela's infrastructure.
There is no plan. This is all wishful thinking. Trump has no plan to make any of this happen; he just says it will, like it will happen if he says it enough.
Thanks Rachel Maddow. Care to supply some sources?
And to use the rhetoric and "logic" of Maddow, just saying something makes it true. So Belle can fuck off.
Looked at multiple sources. Additional Venezuelan oil to the market won't have significant impact for 5-10 years most of them say. An example:
https://en.as.com/latest_news/will-trumps-venezuela-strike-bring-down-oil-prices-what-we-know-about-the-us-takeover-of-the-largest-reserve-in-the-world-f202601-n/
So, could bring down oil prices especially diesel but not for a while. Do oil companies always want lower oil prices?
So you found some rando anti Trump media site that supports your narrative? Maybe you should further back that up with quotes from AOC and Maddow.
I love the constant "It won't help for 5 years, so let's not do it" mentality. Because no need to START the process.
Better than letting socialists or the clinton foundation fix it.
Blood for oil >> gonads for diversity
Paraphrasing a bit: "Say what you want about the tenets of 'blood for oil' adventurism, at least you get some oil out of the deal."
Sacrifice a bajillion dollars, millions of lives, and blow up oil pipelines to keep Putin out of the ass end of Ukraine, depose him if possible...
...but 6 minutes in Venezuela followed by letting the oil companies take back control of the property that was nationalized? Unfathomably corrupt, blood-for-oil warmongering (because, obviously, Maduro was only in it for the prosperity of your average Venezuelan).
Claiming Venezuelan oil revenues will pay for it all is an even more retarded argument. And I also remember the world is better off without Saddam argument. Pretty much everything coming out of the administration is re-tred Bush era arguments, just now without the Congressional authorizatio.
To be clear, quoting Boehm for legal analysis is retarded.
I love Trump's generosity with the American people's money. First he asks us to pay tariffs and now to subsidize oil companies develop Venezuelan oil infrastructure. Maduro is out and the first priority should be get a working government in the country with an opposition. Venezuela needs to start by getting a working government that can make reliable deals with oil companies. Companies should invest because they see a future, not because the American people subsidize the companies. Trump is just piling on the crony capitalism.
Walz +6
Trump+++++ Dementia Scale
You could not handle Trump's schedule.
What play some golf and watch TV, I think I could handle that pretty easy. It not like he read or think.
It not like he read or think.
Masterful caveman prose.
No, YOU don’t read or think. Trump would run you into the ground.
All you are is a stupid, washed up pinko, well past his prime.
Hey, I hear some guy named Hunter Biden with deep expertise in oil and gas is available.
Hugo Chávez, ?nationalized? the industry?
Oh STOP with the deception-indoctrination already. He SOCIALIZED the industry.
And no I don't think Trump should do anything about foreign socialism until he fixes the socialism right here in the USA and telling the US free-market to go do this by his 'Gun' forces isn't going to get us there. He can however try to persuade the Venezuelan government to stop being socialist-stupid again.
What war? What invasion?
This was a 90 minute part of a three hour operation.
It's over. The communists lost. Bigly.
Because they have no real governments. They have captives that hate them.