PDVSA Adapts to Venezuela Supplying Oil to US Indefinitely

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PetrĂ³leos de Venezuela SA finds itself negotiating arrangements fundamentally altering its operational independence with Venezuela supplying oil to the US indefinitely while attempting to maintain appearances of sovereignty. The state company’s statements describing “strictly commercial” transactions contrast sharply with the asymmetric power dynamics underlying discussions.

PDVSA’s comparison of proposed US arrangements for Venezuela supplying oil to the US indefinitely to existing Chevron operations attempts to normalize unprecedented foreign control as routine business. However, Chevron operates as a junior partner holding 25% stakes, whereas American proposals encompass controlling all sales and revenue flows from Venezuelan production.

The company’s public commitment to “partnerships that drive national development in favour of the Venezuelan people” occurs within contexts where refusal means economic collapse. This forced choice between subordination and catastrophe eliminates meaningful negotiating leverage, reducing PDVSA to ratifying predetermined arrangements for Venezuela supplying oil to the US indefinitely.

Hugo ChĂ¡vez-era decrees mandating PDVSA’s minimum 51% ownership and operational control of all exploration fields created legal frameworks now coexisting uneasily with American assertions of sales authority over Venezuela supplying oil to the US indefinitely. The contradiction between legal ownership structures and practical control mechanisms creates ambiguous jurisdictional realities.

PDVSA’s joint ventures with Chinese and Russian companies holding approximately 20% of operations face uncertain futures under American control regimes with Venezuela supplying oil to the US indefinitely. These partnerships represented Venezuela’s efforts to diversify beyond US influence, now potentially threatened by Washington’s comprehensive oversight of all petroleum commerce.

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