Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why US oil companies and international oil companies will not go in to Venezuela. This guy is an ex oil ceo.
Why US oil will not go in to Venezuela.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ox71JCe3N8U
Basically it will cost 100 billion and there is no guarantee you will be there in 3 years. Add in people could be shooting at you and you can get better returns elsewhere.
US servicemen and National Guard will be sacrificed to protect the oil companies.
And everyone should think twice about sending their young people to fight a war to protect the profits of billionaires. We could simply refuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Meh.
Chavez took power and then he “took” everything. It’s called nationalization. Chavez
nationalized all sorts of things, including the lawful possessions of multinational petroleum companies.
Trump is simply de-nationalizing things.
In a country that isn’t his, he’s simply committing crimes.
It’s going to be ironic after Trump and his handlers destroy the country and people around the world start nationalizing our overseas assets. There are going to be so many tears.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why US oil companies and international oil companies will not go in to Venezuela. This guy is an ex oil ceo.
Why US oil will not go in to Venezuela.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ox71JCe3N8U
Basically it will cost 100 billion and there is no guarantee you will be there in 3 years. Add in people could be shooting at you and you can get better returns elsewhere.
US servicemen and National Guard will be sacrificed to protect the oil companies.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know, but what’s the point? Gas is cheap right now. Is this worth the squeeze?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Meh.
Chavez took power and then he “took” everything. It’s called nationalization. Chavez
nationalized all sorts of things, including the lawful possessions of multinational petroleum companies.
Trump is simply de-nationalizing things.
In a country that isn’t his, he’s simply committing crimes.
It’s going to be ironic after Trump and his handlers destroy the country and people around the world start nationalizing our overseas assets. There are going to be so many tears.
Anonymous wrote:This is why US oil companies and international oil companies will not go in to Venezuela. This guy is an ex oil ceo.
Why US oil will not go in to Venezuela.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ox71JCe3N8U
Basically it will cost 100 billion and there is no guarantee you will be there in 3 years. Add in people could be shooting at you and you can get better returns elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Through business deals.
We will not do it like Maduro did, as a pp suggested. We aren't taking notes off a crackpot third world dictator. We have a playback for this and will continue to follow it. Read about how we created Saudi Arabia; it is an early example and more expansive than what we do now, but the basic answer is through business deals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 1976, President Carlos Andrés Pérez began to nationalize Venezuela's oil industry. This process was completed in 2007, President Hugo Chávez ordered the seizure of oil fields and other assets that belonged to U.S. oil companies including ExxonMobil, Chevron and ConocoPhillips without providing compensation. Additionally they took assists from Norway's Statoil and France's Total.
I’m not holding my breadth the non- us oil companies get back anything.
And hmmmm. Let’s see who donated to Trump’s inauguration?
Yup. Chevron, Exxon and ConocoPhillips donated.
I believe those companies ended up getting significant money from international courts--some other venue than the ICC.
No, and this is why it matters to the future of Venezuela.
ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips decided to exit Venezuela when oil was nationalized and refused to accept new minority-stake terms. They sued Venezuela in international courts. While they won massive awards, actually getting the cash has been a decades-long struggle and they have never been fully compensated.
Chevron did chose to remain in Venezuela as a minority partner with the state-owned PDVSA. So instead of getting a lump-sum legal settlement for seized assets, they have been allowed to continue operations under special a U.S. license. So Chevron has been able to export oil to the U.S. and use the proceeds to offset the debt Venezuela owes them from their joint ventures.
Venezuela owes roughly $21 billion to a long list of creditors, including oil companies like ConocoPhillips, mining firms, and people who bought Venezuelan government bonds. Because the country has no cash and is under sanctions, creditors successfully argued that CITGO Petroleum (a U.S.-based oil refining giant) is the "alter ego" of the Venezuelan state. CITGO owns three primary refineries (in Louisiana, Texas, and Illinois) that together produce about 4% to 5% of all fuel in the United States.
In late 2025 Amber Energy (an affiliate of the hedge fund Elliott Investment Management) was selected as the winning bidder.
However, for years, the U.S. and the Venezuelan opposition (led recently by Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado) argued that CITGO must be saved to serve as the backbone of a post-Maduro economy. It was supposed to be a "Democratic Nest Egg".
Anonymous wrote:If any energy company participates, they should be held criminally liable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 1976, President Carlos Andrés Pérez began to nationalize Venezuela's oil industry. This process was completed in 2007, President Hugo Chávez ordered the seizure of oil fields and other assets that belonged to U.S. oil companies including ExxonMobil, Chevron and ConocoPhillips without providing compensation. Additionally they took assists from Norway's Statoil and France's Total.
I’m not holding my breadth the non- us oil companies get back anything.
And hmmmm. Let’s see who donated to Trump’s inauguration?
Yup. Chevron, Exxon and ConocoPhillips donated.
I believe those companies ended up getting significant money from international courts--some other venue than the ICC.
Anonymous wrote:Trump is known for saying, take the oil take the oil, for a long time.
Practically how does it work?
Anonymous wrote:In 1976, President Carlos Andrés Pérez began to nationalize Venezuela's oil industry. This process was completed in 2007, President Hugo Chávez ordered the seizure of oil fields and other assets that belonged to U.S. oil companies including ExxonMobil, Chevron and ConocoPhillips without providing compensation. Additionally they took assists from Norway's Statoil and France's Total.
I’m not holding my breadth the non- us oil companies get back anything.
And hmmmm. Let’s see who donated to Trump’s inauguration?
Yup. Chevron, Exxon and ConocoPhillips donated.