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US Interior Secretary meets Rodriguez and mining companies in Venezuela

U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Venezuelan acting president Delcy Rod met on Wednesday after arriving in the South American nation earlier that day. The encounter was briefly filmed by a number of media outlets.

In Caracas, the Miraflores Presidential palace, two representatives of the United States met with Laura Dogu, U.S. Representative in Venezuela. Burgum had earlier met with executives of foreign mining companies. Two sources confirmed this, while the interim Venezuelan Government is weighing changes to mineral regulations. The U.S. is trying to open Venezuela up to American investment in the oil, gas, and minerals sectors, particularly, after a January raid by the U.S. The raid captured Nicolas Maduro. This is the second time a U.S. Cabinet Secretary has visited since Maduro was ousted. He courted allies like China and Russia. Trump has praised Rodriguez publicly for his cooperation with the U.S. He also hailed Venezuela in his State of the Union Address as "our newest ally and friend". The Trump administration is building a case against Rodriguez, which could include charges of corruption and money laundering, according to a report Tuesday citing four sources familiar with the issue.

Burgum is also the head of the U.S. Energy Dominance Council which focuses on increasing?U.S. Burgum, who also heads the U.S.?Energy Dominance Council, which focuses on boosting?U.S.

Mining Law Reforms

The Venezuelan national assembly, headed by Jorge Rodriguez, Rodriguez's younger brother, is working on a reform to the main mining law of the country, which will include provisions that allow foreign companies the opportunity to exploit rare earths, gold and diamonds. The current mining law in Venezuela dates back to 1999.

After two decades of massive nationalizations, the South American country is owed billions of dollars by industrial conglomerates, mining and oil companies, including Crystallex, Gold Reserve, and Rusoro Mining.

Burgum, according to sources, is paying attention the proposed mining law and met with mining companies on Wednesday. Sources say that Burgum is scheduled to meet with oil and gas companies on Thursday, to discuss investment and expansion. Last month, U.S. Energy Sec. Chris Wright made a visit to Venezuela. Venezuela has yet to conduct exploration to confirm the reserves of 'rare earths', a grouping 17 minor metals which are used to produce magnets that convert power into motion. Rare earths is a subset critical minerals that are produced primarily by China.

The Venezuelan government's 2018 report on mineral deposits uses key terms from the mining industry, such as reserve and resource, interchangeably. This makes it difficult to determine the actual measurements. A map from 2021 listed the reserves of antimony and copper but not their volumes.

Iranian companies have been exploring for mining resources within the country as part of bilateral agreements in recent years, but this has not led to any investments.

(source: Reuters)