# [WARNING] Venezuela signs offshore gas deals with ENI and BP

*Thursday, April 30, 2026 at 2:16 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-30T14:16:31.231Z (6h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, energy, oil, natural_gas, LNG, LatAm, sanctions
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/5242.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Venezuela has signed strategic offshore gas agreements with European majors ENI and BP, framed as part of a broader energy ‘pilgrimage’ to restore production. This signals a potential medium‑term increase in Venezuelan gas and associated liquids output and hints at a continued softening/waiver-based approach to sanctions for European offtake. Near-term price impact is modest, but it lowers the perceived structural tightness of Atlantic basin gas and marginally reduces risk premia attached to Venezuelan barrels.

## Detail

1) What happened: Venezuela’s acting president Delcy Rodríguez announced the signing of “strategic agreements” with ENI (Italy) and BP (UK) covering offshore gas production, positioned within the government’s “Great Pilgrimage for the Return of Oil and Gas Production.” These are not minor technical MoUs; involving two supermajors suggests a concrete framework for capital deployment, project development and eventual export (likely pipeline gas to domestic market and Caribbean, plus LNG or liquids tie-ins longer term).

2) Supply/demand impact: In the very short term (0–6 months), no physical volumes change; these are upstream project and framework agreements that will take years to monetize. However, ENI already operates Perla and other gas assets; fresh agreements can accelerate debottlenecking and new phases. Over a 2–5 year horizon, incremental Venezuelan gas output could reach several bcm/year, with associated condensate/NGL streams in the tens of thousands of b/d. The key effect today is information: it signals that European companies judge the sanctions environment and US policy risk as manageable enough to expand exposure, meaning future supply from Venezuela is more likely to materialize than markets previously discounted.

3) Affected assets and direction: 
- Brent/WTI: Slightly bearish on the structural outlook (more future liquids and gas, less probability of lasting Venezuelan supply isolation). Near-term move likely small but can trim some geopolitical risk premium baked into long‑dated crude curves.
- European gas (TTF) and LNG benchmarks: Marginally bearish on forward curves as traders reassess long-run Atlantic basin tightness and EU diversification from Russian gas. The signal that EU-linked firms are deepening Venezuelan gas ties reduces perceived supply risk.
- Venezuelan sovereign and PDVSA debt: Bullish, as this underlines a de facto gradual reintegration and improves long‑term cash flow prospects.

4) Historical precedent: Similar market reactions followed incremental sanctions relief and Chevron’s expanded licenses in late 2022, when forward Brent/gas curves softened modestly as traders priced a higher probability of Venezuelan barrels returning. ENI and BP engagement adds a European angle, making this more than just a US–Venezuela bilateral story.

5) Duration of impact: The price impact is structural rather than transient but modest in magnitude. Expect a one‑off adjustment in risk premia and continued sensitivity to follow‑through (project FIDs, US waiver renewals, concrete volume guidance). Absent US policy reversal, the bias for Venezuelan gas/liquids supply over 2027–2030 is now clearly higher.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, TTF Dutch Gas Futures, JKM LNG, ENI equity, BP equity, Venezuelan sovereign bonds, PDVSA bonds
