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| US, Venezuelan |
US Venezuelan critical mineral licences have created a new legal route for mineral investment and operations in Venezuela under strict sanctions guidelines. The US Treasury Department issued new and amended general licences on 27 March, allowing limited mineral-related activities and contingent investment agreements.
The licences permit the supply of certain items and services for minerals operations. They also allow negotiations and contingent contracts for investment in Venezuela’s minerals sector, including certain contracts with state-owned miner Minerven if governed under US law.
US Venezuelan critical mineral licences reflect Washington’s attempt to reconnect parts of Venezuela’s resource sector with US-linked investment. However, the opportunity remains complicated by illegal mining, weak infrastructure, political risk and security concerns in key mineral regions.
Venezuela’s Mineral Potential Comes With High Execution Risk
Venezuela is believed to hold strategic resources including copper, nickel, columbite-tantalite and uranium, although available public data do not provide clear reserve volumes. The Orinoco Mining Arc in southern Bolívar state is one of the country’s richest mining regions, with deposits of coltan, bauxite, gold and other metals.
The Orinoco Mining Arc has been designated as a strategic development zone, but the region remains difficult for formal investors. Illegal mining, mineral smuggling, money laundering and the presence of non-government armed groups create serious operational and compliance risks.
Some public-private partnerships already operate in coltan-rich areas, while Venezuela’s armed forces also maintain mining activity through Camimpeg. These structures add further complexity for any foreign company evaluating due diligence, security and legal exposure.
Sanctions Relief Could Support Critical Mineral Strategy
US Venezuelan critical mineral licences come as the US seeks more diversified sources of technology and defense-related minerals. Venezuela’s potential resource base could attract interest if companies can manage sanctions compliance, contract structure, security and infrastructure constraints.
The new licences also follow Venezuela’s effort to open its mining sector to more investment. The national assembly passed a new mining law in an initial vote on 9 March, signalling a policy push to revive resource development.
Still, economic instability remains a major obstacle. Venezuela continues to face currency weakness, very high inflation and years of underinvestment across industrial infrastructure. These conditions mean sanctions relief alone will not quickly convert mineral potential into reliable supply.
The Metalnomist Commentary
The US Venezuelan critical mineral licences are strategically important, but they do not remove the hard risks on the ground. Venezuela may hold valuable minerals, yet the real test will be whether legal access, security, infrastructure and transparent sourcing can be aligned.

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