• Venezuela Desperate For China To Buy More Oil

    Venezuela’s oil lifeline is unraveling—and it’s not just because of collapsing infrastructure or chronic mismanagement. It’s geopolitics, sanctions, and desperation, all swirling around Caracas as the U.S. slams the door shut.

    Last week, Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez showed up in Beijing with an urgent ask: Buy more oil. Fast. With President Trump booting Chevron and other foreign firms out of the country by May 27 and slapping 25% tariffs on anyone who dares to buy Venezuelan crude, Caracas is scrambling to secure its only remaining oil customer: China.

    But Beijing isn’t exactly offering a warm embrace. Chinese officials reportedly want even steeper discounts on Venezuelan barrels and are renegotiating contracts—because when you’re the only buyer left, why not squeeze?

    Meanwhile, the export picture is already deteriorating. Shipments dropped nearly 20% in April as PDVSA canceled Chevron’s cargo loadings early. “Zombie ships”—tankers disguised as legitimate vessels—are now sailing from Venezuela’s coast, trying to hide from global tracking systems. You don’t do that unless you’re desperate.

    China, Venezuela’s largest creditor by far, is still collecting loan repayments from Venezuela in oil. But even that stream is thinning. Production at Sinovensa—once the crown jewel joint venture between CNPC and PDVSA—has dropped to 103,000 bpd, down from 160,000 in 2015.

    Now Trump’s team is openly threatening “consequences” for any nation that continues buying Venezuelan crude, signaling secondary sanctions could hit China next. For an economy already teetering, the loss of its only significant oil customer could be catastrophic. Venezuela’s central bank reserves are drying up, the bolívar is collapsing again, and inflation is knocking.

    Rodríguez called her China tour “confidential” and “extremely happy.” Some instead call it a Hail Mary.

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