Commodities March 13, 2026

U.S. Broadens Venezuela Sanctions Waivers to Ease Energy Investment and Fertilizer Exports

Treasury issues three updated general licenses as prices climb amid U.S. strikes on Iran

By Avery Klein
U.S. Broadens Venezuela Sanctions Waivers to Ease Energy Investment and Fertilizer Exports

The U.S. Treasury issued three updated general licenses on Friday that broaden waivers to Venezuela-related sanctions. The changes are intended to facilitate investment and activities tied to Venezuela's energy sector and to permit fertilizer exports directly to the United States, with the stated goal of supporting American farmers and maintaining global commodity supplies as prices rise amid U.S. strikes on Iran.

Key Points

  • The U.S. Treasury issued three updated general licenses to broaden waivers on Venezuela-related sanctions.
  • The licenses aim to support the revitalization of Venezuela's energy sector and to permit direct fertilizer exports to the United States, with the stated intention of supporting American farmers and keeping global commodity markets well supplied.
  • The announcement was made as commodity prices have risen amid U.S. strikes on Iran, linking the waivers to concerns about market supply and price stability - sectors affected include energy, agriculture (fertilizer), and broader commodity markets.

The United States on Friday updated waivers to sanctions on Venezuela in an effort to make it easier for investment and other activity connected to the country’s oil industry, and to allow the export of fertilizer to the United States. The move comes as prices for commodities have been rising amid U.S. strikes on Iran.

The Treasury Department issued three updated general licenses as part of the action. In a post on X, the department explained the rationale behind the changes, saying they were intended to support a revival of Venezuela’s energy sector and to help keep global commodity markets well supplied.

"Updated several Venezuela-related licenses to further support the revitalization of the country’s energy sector and help ensure a well-supplied global commodity market."

The post went on to note that the authorizations expand the scope of permitted investment and activities in Venezuela’s energy industry and explicitly allow fertilizer to be exported directly to the United States "to support our great American farmers."

"These authorizations expand permitted investment and activities in Venezuela’s energy industry and allow for the export of fertilizer directly to the U.S. to support our great American farmers," the Treasury Department said in a post on X.

Officials framed the license updates as steps to facilitate business engagement in Venezuela’s energy sector while also addressing supply considerations for agricultural inputs in the U.S. The public statements link the authorizations to two distinct objectives: aiding the revitalization of an overseas energy industry and ensuring an adequately supplied global commodity market.

Details beyond the issuance of the three updated general licenses and the Treasury Department’s public remarks were not provided in the post. The changes were presented in the context of recent pressure on commodity prices related to U.S. strikes on Iran, which the department cited as part of the environment in which the waivers were updated.


Context and next steps

The Treasury Department framed the updated licenses as targeted authorizations. How these expanded permissions will translate into on-the-ground investment, activity within Venezuela’s energy sector, or flows of fertilizer to the United States was not detailed in the public post. The department highlighted support for U.S. agriculture as a stated objective for permitting direct fertilizer exports.

Risks

  • Commodity prices are rising amid U.S. strikes on Iran, which introduces market volatility for energy and agricultural inputs.
  • It is unclear from the public statement how effectively the updated licenses will translate into increased investment or activity in Venezuela’s energy sector, creating uncertainty for market participants and investors.
  • The extent to which direct fertilizer exports will alter U.S. agricultural supply conditions was not specified, leaving outcomes for downstream agricultural markets uncertain.

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