Trump energy team to meet with oil execs on Venezuela sector rebuild

Ari Natter and Kevin Crowley January 05, 2026

(Bloomberg) – U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright plans to talk this week with oil-industry executives about reviving Venezuela’s energy sector following the capture of President Nicolás Maduro, according to people familiar with the matter. 

Wright will attend the Goldman Sachs Energy, Clean Tech & Utilities Conference in Miami this week that executives from Chevron Corp., ConocoPhillips and other companies are scheduled to attend. Chevron is the only oil supermajor still operating in Venezuela.

U.S. President Donald Trump is banking that U.S. oil companies will step in to revive production in Venezuela after years of corruption, underinvestment and neglect have ravaged output. Crude producers, however, are apt to move cautiously.

See also: Chevron shares jump as Trump signals Venezuela oil revival

Venezuela sits atop the world’s largest reserves, but experts estimate that rebuilding the nation’s energy infrastructure will require about $10 billion per year of investment over the next decade.

While crude producers have long-term interest in Venezuela, they’re not willing to make investments based simply on the fact that the U.S. removed Maduro from power over the weekend, according to one of the people. 

Before making any commitments, oil companies want to ensure there’s a stable government in place, that the rule of law is upheld and that they have some degree of confidence Washington will to support their presence in Venezuela even after Trump is no longer in office, the person said.

Map created in collaboration with Petroleum Economist and Global Energy Infrastructure. For an overview of this project and other related infrastructure developments, visit Global Energy Infrastructure. Copyright World Oil 2026. All rights reserved.

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