Trump admin asking US oil industry to return to Venezuela — but no takers

By Ben Lefebvre, Sophia Cai, James Bikales | 12/18/2025 07:06 AM EST

The administration’s outreach to the industry, previously unreported, is the latest sign the White House is dreaming of a post-Maduro future for Venezuela.

Audience members wave Venezuelan and American flags.

Members of the audience wave Venezuelan and American flags as President Donald Trump speaks to a Venezuelan American community at Florida International University in Miami on Feb. 18, 2019, to speak out against President Nicolas Maduro. Andrew Harnik/AP

The Trump administration is asking U.S. oil companies if they’re interested in returning to Venezuela once leader Nicolás Maduro is gone, four people familiar with the discussions told POLITICO.

And so far, the answer is a hard “no.”

The administration’s outreach to the industry, previously unreported, is the latest sign the White House is dreaming of a post-Maduro future for Venezuela — and how the world’s oil markets are both helping and hindering that goal.

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The markets, glutted with supply and with prices at nearly five-year lows, are giving President Donald Trump an unusually free hand to tighten military pressure on the South American OPEC member, much the way they largely shrugged off U.S. and Israeli missile strikes on Iran in June. But those prices are also way too low to entice companies to take the risk of pouring huge investments into the crumbling Venezuelan oil facilities that former strongman Hugo Chávez seized decades ago, industry officials and analysts said.

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