CARACAS/NEW DELHI: The optics were familiar: handshakes at Hyderabad House, diplomatic warmth, and reaffirmations of Global South solidarity. But beneath the ceremonial choreography of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s meeting with Venezuela’s Acting President Delcy Rodríguez lies a far more consequential shift, one that reflects not just a bilateral reset, but a recalibration of India’s global energy and geopolitical strategy.
At the heart of the engagement is a simple reality: energy insecurity is reshaping diplomacy. With global supply chains strained by conflict in West Asia and disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz, India, one of the world’s largest energy importers has moved decisively to diversify its crude basket. Venezuela, home to some of the largest proven oil reserves globally, has re-emerged as a critical partner in that search.
The numbers tell the story. In recent weeks, Venezuela has surged to become one of India’s top crude suppliers, underlining what Indian officials describe as a “natural complementarity” between a resource-rich exporter and a demand-heavy economy.
Yet this is not merely about barrels of oil. The Modi–Rodríguez talks signal an attempt to build a broader economic architecture spanning critical minerals, pharmaceuticals, agriculture, and manufacturing. For India, the logic is clear: energy ties can anchor a deeper strategic footprint in Latin America. For Venezuela, emerging from years of sanctions and instability, India offers both a stable market and a pathway to economic reintegration.
But herein lies the challenge.
For years, India–Latin America relations have been framed through the language of “untapped potential.” The Venezuela engagement suggests that phase is ending. What replaces it is far more demanding: delivery.
The obstacles are formidable. Venezuela’s energy sector, despite its vast reserves, remains structurally fragile plagued by underinvestment, infrastructure decay, and political uncertainty. While recent reforms and geopolitical shifts have reopened doors, sustained engagement will require long-term capital, regulatory clarity, and risk tolerance from Indian public and private players.
There is also the geopolitical tightrope. Venezuela’s oil sector is no longer insulated from great-power politics. The easing of sanctions that enabled India’s return to Venezuelan crude is contingent, not permanent. Any deepening of ties will have to navigate an increasingly complex matrix involving Washington, global oil markets, and shifting alliances.
For New Delhi, this raises a strategic question: can India convert opportunistic energy purchases into durable partnerships without becoming entangled in external dependencies?
The answer will depend on execution. Indian PSUs have already invested in Venezuelan energy assets, but scaling that presence particularly in upstream exploration and downstream refining will require more than diplomatic goodwill. It will demand institutional coordination, financial commitment, and a willingness to operate in high-risk environments.
At the same time, the expansion into critical minerals and mining reflects a forward-looking dimension. As global supply chains pivot toward clean energy and advanced manufacturing, securing access to strategic resources is becoming as important as oil itself. Venezuela’s untapped mineral wealth presents an opportunity, but also a test of India’s ability to compete in an increasingly contested resource landscape.
What emerges, then, is a partnership at an inflection point.
The Modi–Rodríguez meeting may not have produced headline-grabbing agreements, but it has clarified intent. India is no longer content with rhetorical engagement in Latin America; it is seeking tangible outcomes. Venezuela, for its part, is positioning itself as more than just an oil supplier, it wants to be a long-term strategic partner.
The success of this shift will hinge on whether both sides can move from alignment to implementation.
Because in today’s fractured global order, diplomacy is no longer judged by the breadth of discussions, but by the depth of delivery.
– Ariel Durán and Dr. M Shahid Siddiqui













