China Stands to Lose Billions in Venezuela After Maduro’s Capture

The U.S. military operation redirects Venezuela’s oil to Washington, imperiling China’s loans-for-crude agreements and the refineries that depended on it.
China Stands to Lose Billions in Venezuela After Maduro’s Capture
View of the refinery El Palito in Puerto Cabello, Carabobo state, Venezuela on Jan. 11, 2026. Maryorin Mendez/AFP via Getty Images
|Updated:
0:00

With the apprehension of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro in Caracas, the United States has effectively gained control over the world’s largest proven oil reserves, cutting off one of Beijing’s most important energy lifelines in the Western Hemisphere.

Just hours before his capture by the U.S. military, Maduro met with Chinese special envoy Qiu Xiaoqi, praising the “brotherly ties” between Caracas and Beijing. Those ties were built largely on oil. For years, most of Venezuela’s crude exports flowed to China, anchoring a relationship that mixed energy supply with debt, diplomacy, and political survival. That relationship unraveled quickly.

Google LogoMark Us Preferred on Google
Sean Tseng
Sean Tseng
Author
Sean Tseng is a Canada-based reporter for The Epoch Times covering U.S.–China relations, CCP politics, trade policy, and emerging technologies including AI and defense. He holds a BASc in mechanical engineering from the University of British Columbia.