China loans make Venezuela’s outlook more precarious
Patience is wearing thin among both China and other trading partners
Venezuela's economic forecast continues to worsen. The government is struggling to pay back interest on loans to China—the terms of which were relaxed back in June 2016—and its dependency on oil exports to the Asian superpower have become "a question of survival", as one analyst puts it. Along with Russia, China has lent Venezuela over $77bn—including $250m the Development Bank of China approved on 5 July to increase petroleum development—but Caracas has exhausted its debtors' and expropriated investors' patience, and some have started to seek refund via the seizure of cargoes shipping PDVSA oil. Several Venezuelan oil cargoes have been seized in the Dutch Caribbean islands in the past two y
Also in this section
5 December 2025
Mistaken assumptions around an oil bull run that never happened are a warning over the talk of a supply glut
4 December 2025
Time is running out for Lukoil and Rosneft to divest international assets that will be mostly rendered useless to them when the US sanctions deadline arrives in mid-December
3 December 2025
Aramco’s pursuit of $30b in US gas partnerships marks a strategic pivot. The US gains capital and certainty; Saudi Arabia gains access, flexibility and a new export future
2 December 2025
The interplay between OPEC+, China and the US will define oil markets throughout 2026






