President Donald Trump and his cabinet are making the case for US oil companies to invest billions of dollars into Venezuela's oil sector, with meetings scheduled with industry executives in the coming days.
Trump has started previewing upcoming meetings with oil industry executives, who he is counting on to deliver an economic revival in the South American country. Trump ousted Venezuela's president Nicolas Maduro through a surprise military strike over the weekend, and he threatened to attack again if Venezuela does not deliver on his desired policies.
"I'm also meeting with oil companies, let's go, you know what that's about," Trump said on Tuesday at a retreat for Republicans in the US House of Representatives. "We've got a lot of oil to drill which is gonna bring down oil prices even further."
Venezuela's vice president Delcy Rodriguez was confirmed as interim president after the US captured Maduro in the military strike. Trump has floated a timeline under which elections will not be held until the turnaround of the country's oil sector, which fell into decline after years of under-investment and sanctions. Venezuela produced 934,000 b/d in November, according to an average of Opec secondary sources including Argus.
"What we want to do is fix up the oil, fix up the country, bring the country back and then have elections," Trump said on 4 January.
Trump's cabinet has also been part of the recent outreach to the oil sector. US energy secretary Chris Wright plans to meet on Wednesday with executives from "several" US oil companies at an energy conference that Goldman Sachs is hosting in Miami, Florida, according to the US Department of Energy.
US interior secretary Doug Burgum said on an interview on Fox News that were business opportunities arising from the "synergy" between Venezuela's oil output and the US refining sector.
The Trump administration focused on removing Maduro from power — first by enticing him to leave and then by force — without considering what would come next, according the former US envoy in Caracas, James Story.
"Apparently, the objective now is oil," Story said at an event on Tuesday held by the Washington think tank the Atlantic Council. "How we get there is unclear to me, unclear to the oil companies, and [it] certainly will be unclear to the insurers and everything else."
Chevron and US energy companies interested in working in Venezuela will need waivers from existing US sanctions, which Trump imposed in January 2019. The US in 2022 granted a waiver to Chevron to allow it to lift oil from a joint venture with PdV. The Trump administration removed that waiver in April 2025, only to re-grant it under more restrictive terms last August.
More waivers for US companies are likely in the works, an energy industry insider said, who said that it was "more a matter of when not if". If sanctions are lifted, Venezuela will see the return of oil field service companies and "wildcatters, bootstrapping things together to get things online and get majors in", the insider said.
State leaders say they see economic potential across the energy sector if there is a revival of oil production from Venezuela.
"Many executives have called me and said, 'Hey look, we're willing to go into Venezuela if the oil companies go in,'" Louisiana governor Jeff Landry (R) said during an interview with Fox News. "Men and women are ready to go down there and to supply our refineries along the Gulf Coast with the crude we need to keep gas prices low."
Trump suggested on Monday there could be federal government support for oil industry investment in Venezuela. Oil companies investing in restoring oil infrastructure will be "reimbursed by us or through revenue," Trump told NBC News on Monday. Even so, the industry will likely require further assurances given the risks involved.
"The fact is, Venezuela is a risky place for doing business," Atlantic Council senior research fellow Iria Puyosa said. "Those who have appetites for risky business are already there, and those who want to do business in an open, transparent market are not going to try."

