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US-led oil sales from Venezuela to bring in $5 billion in months, energy chief Wright tells NBC News
US-led oil sales from Venezuela to bring in $5 billion in months, energy chief Wright tells NBC News
U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Venezuela’s interim President Delcy Rodriguez, not pictured, speak with the media after attending a meeting, marking the highest-level U.S. visit focused on energy policy to the OPEC nation in nearly three decades, as Washington conducts its first on-the-ground assessment of the oil industry it aims to help rebuild, in Caracas, Venezuela, February 11, 2026. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria · Reuters
By Sheila Dang and Timothy Gardner
Fri, February 13, 2026 at 6:54 AM GMT+9 3 min read
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By Sheila Dang and Timothy Gardner
Feb 12 (Reuters) - Oil sales from Venezuela controlled by the U.S. have totaled over $1 billion so far and in the next few months will bring in another $5 billion, U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright told NBC News on Thursday.
Much of the oil is being refined in U.S. refineries, and the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump has handed over proceeds from the sales to Venezuela’s interim government, he added.
“Sales today are over a billion dollars, and in fact, we have sort of short-term agreements over the next few months that will bring in another $5 billion,” Wright said in the interview on his second day of a visit to Venezuela.
Wright is the highest-ranking American official to visit Venezuela since the U.S. capture and removal of President Nicolas Maduro in January. He met with Interim President and Oil Minister Delcy Rodriguez on Wednesday and on Thursday toured facilities in the Orinoco heavy crude belt with officials from U.S. oil company Chevron .
Washington will control those sales and the flow of the funds “until a representative government is stood up in Venezuela,” Wright said in the interview.
He added that free elections would “quite likely” take place before the end of the second Trump administration.
‘ON THE ROAD TO INVESTABLE’
Wright said that oil major Exxon Mobil is in talks with the Venezuelan government and gathering data about the oil sector, even though CEO Darren Woods described the South American country as “uninvestable” during a White House meeting in January.
“They are gathering data. They are looking at things. They’re a big company, so they’re going to move slowly and carefully,” Wright said.
He acknowledged it has been difficult for American companies to invest in Venezuela. “But it’s on the road to becoming investable,” he added.
Exxon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The No. 1 U.S. oil major has signaled caution about making long-term investments in Venezuela, a country it left in 2007 after its assets were expropriated.
In late January, however, Woods said that Exxon remained willing to send a technical team to Venezuela to evaluate the state of the oil infrastructure, and said he believed the Trump administration could help solve the country’s problems.
Wright said in the interview that Chevron, the only U.S. oil producer currently in the country, is in the midst of large expansion plans in Venezuela, with a “huge amount of capital, dramatic growth in their oil production, pretty aggressive move for a big, tamer company.”
In another interview with CNN, Wright said Chevron was on target to double production in one of its Venezuelan oilfields over the next 12 to 18 months, and potentially quintuple it over the next five years.
Chevron did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
(Reporting by Sheila Dang in Houston and Timothy Gardner in Washington; Editing by Nathan Crooks and Nia Williams)
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