BBC Latin America
centerREPORTVenezuela signs deal with US energy giant to rebuild power grid

Full BriefGenerated 7d ago
What Happened
Venezuela’s interim president, Delcy Rodríguez, signed an agreement with US energy company General Electric Vernova to rebuild the country’s failing power grid, during a televised event at the presidential palace on Monday. Energy Minister Rolando Alcalá, an electrical engineer appointed three months ago, led the deal, which aims to address frequent blackouts that can last 10 hours or more, attributed by analysts to chronic underinvestment and high consumption. The move follows the January ouster of Nicolás Maduro by US forces and signals Rodríguez’s pivot toward US investors, though critics note that key state institutions remain under her party’s control. Separately, US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth claimed a recent military strike killed the leader of the Tren de Aragua criminal gang ‘in full co-operation with Venezuelan security forces’, while US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told Congress that free elections require new electoral councils, free media, and political party preparation, without giving a timeline.
Key Actors
- ·Delcy Rodríguez(Interim President of Venezuela)Signed the General Electric deal, opening the economy to US investors while maintaining control over key institutions.
- ·General Electric Vernova(US energy company)Will rebuild Venezuela’s national electricity grid under the agreement.
- ·Marco Rubio(US Secretary of State)Conditioned US support for Venezuelan elections on media freedom, political party preparation, and a new electoral council, without specifying a timeline.
- ·Venezuelan opposition(Political opposition groups)Warned that the legislative, executive, judicial, and electoral branches remain dominated by Maduro loyalists.
Why It Matters
The deal marks a sharp break from Maduro-era state control, potentially addressing a chronic infrastructure crisis and signaling alignment with Washington, but persistent institutional control by regime remnants raises questions about the interim government’s democratic legitimacy and its ability to attract sustained foreign investment. The explicit US conditioning of election support on reforms ties Venezuela’s recovery to geopolitical cooperation, while direct security operations highlight deepening bilateral security ties.
Watch For
Concrete implementation steps for the power grid reconstruction, including financing details and timelines. Whether the interim government moves to replace the electoral council and relax media restrictions as demanded by Secretary Rubio, and any announcement of an election date. Further joint US-Venezuelan security operations and potential retaliation from Maduro loyalists or criminal groups.
Generated 7d ago · Based on full articleAuto-Compiled
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