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Trump Announces the Cancellation of Oil Concessions Granted to Venezuela by Biden
The Trump administration seeks to exert greater pressure on the Maduro government.
The President of the United States, Donald Trump, announced that he will cancel the concessions granted to Venezuela under a petroleum transaction agreement signed during the administration of Joe Biden, who gave facilities to the dictator Nicolás Maduro.
Through a post on Truth Social, Trump confirmed that the agreement, dated November 26, 2022, will be rescinded starting March 1, the date on which its renewal was scheduled.
The reasons behind the decision
Trump argued that Nicolás Maduro's regime has not complied with the conditions established in the agreement, particularly regarding electoral guarantees and the repatriation of Venezuelan criminals present in the United States.
- "We are reversing the concessions that the corrupt Joe Biden gave to Nicolás Maduro on the petroleum transaction agreement, dated November 26, 2022," Trump stated in his statement.
- "The regime has not been transporting the violent criminals they sent to our country back to Venezuela at the fast pace they had agreed. Therefore, I order that Biden's ineffective and unfulfilled 'Concession Agreement' be rescinded starting from the March 1 renewal option," the president added.
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The 2022 agreement and Chevron's role
In November 2022, the Biden administration granted Chevron a license to resume oil production in Venezuela, after the sanctions imposed by the United States in 2019 paralyzed drilling operations in the South American country.
- The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the Treasury Department granted Chevron a renewable six-month license, allowing it to extract and market Venezuelan oil.
- While new drilling was not authorized, the company could repair and maintain the oil fields where it operated.
Trump's decision to reverse this agreement could generate tensions in the energy market and affect diplomatic relations between Washington and Caracas. With the cancellation of the license, Chevron and other American companies would once again be unable to operate in Venezuela, a country with one of the largest crude oil reserves in the world.
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Impact on the relationship between the United States and Venezuela
Trump's announcement marks a shift in U.S. policy toward Venezuela, reversing the strategy of sanction relaxation applied by Biden.
With this measure, the Trump administration seeks to exert greater pressure on Maduro's government, demanding compliance with electoral commitments and the return of immigrants with criminal records.
As the implementation date of the decision approaches, reactions are expected both in the oil industry and in the diplomatic sphere, with possible repercussions on crude supply and Venezuelan domestic policy.
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