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US eases Venezuela oil sanctions as Trump seeks to boost world oil supply during Iran war

18 March 2026
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.
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U.S. com­pa­nies will be al­lowed to do busi­ness with Venezuela’s state-owned oil and gas com­pa­ny af­ter the Trea­sury De­part­ment eased sanc­tions, with some lim­i­ta­tions, on Wednes­day as the Trump ad­min­is­tra­tion looks for ways to boost world oil sup­plies dur­ing the Iran war.

The Trea­sury is­sued a broad au­tho­riza­tion al­low­ing Petróleos de Venezuela S.A, or PDVSA, to di­rect­ly sell Venezue­lan oil to U.S. com­pa­nies and on glob­al mar­kets, a mas­sive shift af­ter Wash­ing­ton for years had large­ly blocked deal­ings with Venezuela’s gov­ern­ment and its oil sec­tor.

Sep­a­rate­ly, the White House said Trump would waive, for 60 days, Jones Act re­quire­ments for goods shipped be­tween U.S. ports to be moved on U.S.-flagged ves­sels. The 1920s law, de­signed to pro­tect the Amer­i­can ship­build­ing sec­tor, is of­ten blamed for mak­ing gas more ex­pen­sive.

The moves high­light the in­creased pres­sure that the Re­pub­li­can ad­min­is­tra­tion is un­der to ease soar­ing oil prices as the Unit­ed States, along with Is­rael, wages a war with Iran with­out a fore­see­able end date. Glob­al oil prices have since spiked as Iran halt­ed traf­fic through the nar­row Strait of Hor­muz, where one-fifth of the world’s oil typ­i­cal­ly pass­es through from the Per­sian Gulf to cus­tomers world­wide.

The Trea­sury’s li­cense is de­signed to in­cen­tivize new in­vest­ment in Venezuela’s en­er­gy sec­tor and is in­tend­ed to ben­e­fit both the U.S and Venezuela, while in­creas­ing the glob­al oil sup­ply, a Trea­sury of­fi­cial told The As­so­ci­at­ed Press. The of­fi­cial was not au­tho­rized to dis­cuss the mat­ter pub­licly and spoke one con­di­tion of anonymi­ty.

Since the ouster and ar­rest of Nicolás Maduro as Venezuela’s pres­i­dent dur­ing a U.S. mil­i­tary op­er­a­tion in Jan­u­ary, Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump has said the U.S. would ef­fec­tive­ly “run” Venezuela and sell its oil.

The U.S. li­cense pro­vides tar­get­ed re­lief from sanc­tions, but does not lift the penal­ties al­to­geth­er. The li­cense al­lows com­pa­nies that ex­ist­ed be­fore Jan. 29, 2025, to buy Venezue­lan oil and en­gage in trans­ac­tions that would nor­mal­ly be banned un­der Amer­i­can sanc­tions, re­open­ing trade for a ma­jor oil pro­duc­er to glob­al mar­kets.

There are some lim­its.

Pay­ments can­not go di­rect­ly to sanc­tioned Venezue­lan en­ti­ties such as PDVSA, but must be sent in­stead to a spe­cial U.S.-con­trolled ac­count. In oth­er words, the U.S. will al­low the oil trade but will con­trol the cash flow.

Ad­di­tion­al­ly, deals in­volv­ing Rus­sia, Iran, North Ko­rea, Cu­ba and some Chi­nese en­ti­ties will not be al­lowed. Trans­ac­tions in­volv­ing Venezue­lan debt or bonds will not be al­lowed.

The li­cense is ex­pect­ed to give a mas­sive boost to Venezuela’s oil-de­pen­dent econ­o­my and help en­cour­age com­pa­nies that have been ap­pre­hen­sive to in­vest. The de­ci­sion is part of the Trump ad­min­is­tra­tion’s phased-in plan to turn around Venezuela. But crit­ics of the act­ing Venezue­lan gov­ern­ment ar­gue that the move re­wards Venezuela’s lead­er­ship -– all loy­al to Maduro and the rul­ing par­ty -– while re­pres­sion, cor­rup­tion and hu­man rights abus­es con­tin­ue.

Many pub­lic sec­tor work­ers sur­vive on rough­ly $160 per month, while the av­er­age pri­vate sec­tor em­ploy­ee earned about $237 last year, when the an­nu­al in­fla­tion rate soared to 475%, ac­cord­ing to Venezuela’s cen­tral bank, and sent the cost of food be­yond what many can af­ford.

Venezuela sits atop the world’s largest oil re­serves and used them to pow­er what was once Latin Amer­i­ca’s strongest econ­o­my. But cor­rup­tion, mis­man­age­ment and U.S. eco­nom­ic sanc­tions saw pro­duc­tion steadi­ly de­cline from the 3.5 mil­lion bar­rels per day pumped in 1999, when Maduro’s men­tor, Hugo Chávez, took pow­er, to less than 400,000 bar­rels per day in 2020.

A year ear­li­er, the Trea­sury De­part­ment un­der the first Trump ad­min­is­tra­tion locked Venezuela out of world oil mar­kets when it sanc­tioned PDVSA as part of a pol­i­cy pun­ish­ing Maduro’s gov­ern­ment for cor­rupt, an­ti-de­mo­c­ra­t­ic and crim­i­nal ac­tiv­i­ties. That forced the gov­ern­ment to sell its re­main­ing oil out­put at a dis­count — about 40% be­low mar­ket prices — to buy­ers such as Chi­na and in oth­er Asian mar­kets. Venezuela even start­ed ac­cept­ing pay­ments in Russ­ian rubles, bartered goods or cryp­tocur­ren­cy.

The new li­cense does not al­low pay­ments in gold or cryp­tocur­ren­cy, in­clud­ing the petro, which was a cryp­to to­ken is­sued by the Venezue­lan gov­ern­ment in 2018.

Mean­time, White House press sec­re­tary Karo­line Leav­itt said the Jones Act waiv­er would help “mit­i­gate the short-term dis­rup­tions to the oil mar­ket” dur­ing the Iran war and would “al­low vi­tal re­sources like oil, nat­ur­al gas, fer­til­iz­er, and coal to flow freely to U.S. ports.”

WASH­ING­TON (AP)