Latest update March 12th, 2026 9:56 PM
Jan 24, 2026 News
(AL-JAZEERA) Venezuela’s parliament has advanced a proposal to loosen the state’s control over its oil industry and boost the private sector’s role in the first major overhaul of the industry in years.
The proposal to reform Venezuela’s Hydrocarbons Law was thrust upon the country after the abduction of former President Nicolas Maduro by the United States on January 3 and had generated significant interest across businesses and political parties.
In the wake of those events, the White House and US Energy Secretary Chris Wright announced a $500bn energy agreement between the two countries, under which Washington seeks to exert significant influence over Venezuela’s oil industry.
Approved in its first reading on Thursday, the reform breaks with several principles of the oil nationalisation carried out by former President Hugo Chavez in 2006, which reserved exclusive crude marketing rights for state-owned oil company PDVSA.

The Nave Photon, carrying crude oil from Venezuela, is docked at Port Freeport in Freeport, Texas, US [File: Antranik Tavitian/Reuters]
The bill also proposes repealing the law that reserves ancillary services related to primary oil activities for the state, allowing private companies to subcontract oil extraction, provided they assume the associated costs and risks.
It further introduces flexibility in royalty payments, lowering them from 30 percent to as little as 15 percent of extracted crude as an incentive to attract investment, particularly new drilling in undeveloped areas.
Another key change seeks to incorporate legal safeguards through independent dispute-resolution mechanisms such as mediation and arbitration.
Legal certainty was among the main demands raised by executives from multinational oil companies during a meeting with US President Donald Trump on January 9, in reference to multibillion-dollar claims filed by ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips against the Venezuelan state following the nationalisation process in 2007.
For economist Jose Guerra, former director of research at Venezuela’s Central Bank, the proposal remains heavy on rhetoric. He argues it lacks clarity and does not explicitly establish that private companies can hold majority ownership.
“This law is a law of ambiguity, designed to avoid openly breaking with Chavez’s oil legacy,” Guerra said. “It is not emphatic about private participation.”
He noted that, in practice, the government has already ceded ground to private capital through production participation contracts (CPP), under which companies could effectively hold more than 50 percent.
The CPP framework emerged in 2024 when Rodríguez was serving as energy and oil minister. Its operation has been marked by opacity, as it is shielded by Article 37 of the Anti-Blockade Law, enacted to circumvent sanctions imposed on PDVSA in 2019.
That provision establishes a regime of confidentiality and document classification, allowing the government to bypass the existing Hydrocarbons Law, which limits private or foreign capital to joint ventures in which PDVSA must hold a majority stake.
On January 15, Rodríguez told the National Assembly that the introduction of CPPs in April of 2024 led to a rebound in oil production, from 900,000 barrels per day to 1.2 million bpd, and that investments under this model reached nearly $900m in 2025.
But the introduction of the proposed changes were marred by controversy as the draft was not made public until just a couple of hours before lawmakers convened for its first debate. The opposition declined to vote, arguing that in a country with the world’s largest oil reserves, energy legislation should be treated as a “social pact”, the result of a broad and thorough consultation among all stakeholders.
Luis Oliveros, dean of the Faculty of Economic Sciences at the Metropolitan University at Caracas, described it as a positive sign that the law formalises what is known as the “Chevron model”.
“It opens room for foreign companies to assume technical, operational and financial management of the joint ventures they operate, with greater flexibility,” he said. However, he added that eliminating PDVSA’s mandatory majority stake would have been more attractive to foreign investors.
Oswaldo Felizzola, coordinator of Venezuela’s International Centre for Energy and Environment (CIEA), told Al Jazeera that the reform contains enough elements to invite new capital to invest in the industry, but ultimately falls short.
“What has been proposed is necessary, but not sufficient. The law needs to be updated for the 21st century,” Felizzola said. “That said, it is no longer as statist as to paralyse the industry.”
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