Venezuela’s interim government ends PDVSA’s control over oil sector
New reforms break the state oil giant's decades-long monopoly, opening the door to private investment in the world's largest proven reserves
Venezuela just did something that would have been unthinkable two years ago. The country’s interim government signed amendments to the Organic Hydrocarbons Law on January 29-30, 2026, effectively dismantling PDVSA’s stranglehold over the nation’s oil industry.
What the reforms actually change
Private companies can now hold minority stakes in joint ventures and exercise technical and operational management over those ventures. Private producers will also be able to commercialize their own output and keep the proceeds independent of PDVSA’s control.
Government royalties have been capped at 30% under the new framework. The oil ministry’s contracting authority has been expanded, and the reforms explicitly allow for asset transfers and outsourcing away from PDVSA.
The political backdrop
The reforms follow a dramatic political transition that began when the United States captured Nicolás Maduro on January 3, 2026. Interim President Delcy RodrÃguez has moved quickly to signal a break from the socialist economic model that defined Venezuela for over two decades. With certain US sanctions being eased to permit limited transactions involving Venezuelan-origin oil, the interim government appears to be creating a legal framework to attract foreign capital.
The interim government projects oil-sector investment rising to $1.4 billion for 2026, up from roughly $900 million in 2025. That’s a 55% increase in a single year.
Why crypto and macro investors should pay attention
Venezuela has an unusual history with crypto. The Maduro government launched the Petro, a state-backed cryptocurrency supposedly tied to oil reserves, in 2018. It was widely regarded as a sanctions evasion tool and eventually fizzled. Venezuela has also been one of the highest per-capita crypto adoption countries in Latin America, largely because its population used Bitcoin and stablecoins to escape hyperinflation and capital controls.
Venezuela’s track record of expropriating foreign assets is long and well-documented. The fact that these reforms were enacted by an interim government, not one that emerged from a normal democratic process, adds another layer of political uncertainty.