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    Venezuela tells China oil prices won't be set by the U.S., seeks to reassure investment after Maduro capture

    CNBCFebruary 4, 2026 at 8:54 AMNeutral1 min read

    Key Takeaways

    • 1Venezuela is actively seeking to reassure China of investment safety and debt repayment consistency following the contested presidential election result.
    • 2The rhetoric emphasizes a shift away from U.S. dollar hegemony in energy pricing, aiming to strengthen the energy alliance within the BRICS framework.
    • 3Despite possessing the world's largest proven oil reserves, Venezuela's production remains near historical lows, requiring significant foreign technical expertise and capital to recover.
    • 4The move follows the expiration of U.S. sanctions relief, forcing Venezuela to pivot back toward eastern markets to maintain its primary revenue stream.
    • 5Chinese state-owned enterprises remain the primary creditors and potential lifelines for the Venezuelan oil industry if secondary sanctions are not aggressively enforced.

    Venezuela's recent diplomatic overtures toward China represent a critical attempt to stabilize its oil-dependent economy and secure geopolitical backing following the controversial re-election of President Nicolás Maduro. By asserting that oil prices will not be dictated by U.S. policy, Venezuela is signaling its commitment to the 'petroyuan' and other non-dollar settlement mechanisms, which aligns with China’s strategic interest in diversifying away from the U.S. financial system. For investors, this underscores the deepening fragmentation of the global energy market into Western and BRICS-aligned blocs. Historically, Venezuela has relied on Chinese loans-for-oil deals, but production has struggled under years of mismanagement and U.S. sanctions. The reassurance to Beijing suggests a push to revitalize the state-run PDVSA through Chinese infrastructure investment, potentially bypassing the impact of reinstated U.S. sanctions (General License 44). Investors should monitor whether China increases its direct capital expenditure in Venezuelan fields or remains cautious due to the country's high political risk. The outcome will influence global crude supply balances, particularly the availability of heavy sour grades favored by complex refiners in Asia and the U.S. Gulf Coast.

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