Jesse Ramdeo
Senior Reporter
jesse.ramdeo@cnc3.co.tt
Foreign and Caricom Affairs Minister Sean Sobers is keeping silent on a high-stakes diplomatic initiative announced by Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar last month, raising fresh questions about the status of Trinidad and Tobago’s push to secure its share of cross-border energy resources from neighbouring Venezuela.
Nearly a month after Persad-Bissessar declared that a diplomatic delegation would be dispatched to Caracas to ensure the country obtains its “just share” of oil and gas reserves, there has been no official update on whether that mission has materialised.
The Prime Minister had indicated the move was part of a broader effort to revive stalled energy projects involving shared resources between the two countries, an issue of growing national importance given Trinidad and Tobago’s dependence on the energy sector.
Recent repeated attempts to obtain clarity from Sobers have proven futile. Calls and messages seeking comment on the timeline, composition or objectives of the proposed delegation have gone unanswered.
The Office of the Prime Minister has also remained tight-lipped, offering no further details since the initial announcement.
Just weeks after Trinidad and Tobago signalled its intent to re-engage Venezuela, the country’s acting president Delcy Rodríguez, has been actively courting other Caribbean nations.
In late April, Rodríguez travelled to Barbados, where she held talks with Prime Minister Mia Mottley, extending an invitation for Barbados to invest directly in Venezuela’s oil and gas sector.
During those discussions, both sides explored energy cooperation, with Venezuela proposing joint efforts to boost hydrocarbon production.
Rodríguez underscored the potential for such partnerships to strengthen regional energy security, particularly for Caribbean states facing supply challenges.
Her visit to Barbados, following an earlier stop in Grenada, signals a broader Venezuelan push to deepen ties within Caricom, even as its relationship with Trinidad and Tobago remains delicate.
Energy cooperation between Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela has long been viewed as mutually beneficial, particularly in unlocking cross-border gas fields.
However, geopolitical tensions and strained rhetoric have complicated that pathway.
Weighing in on the issue yesterday, former Foreign and Caricom Affairs Minister Dr Amery Browne criticised the Prime Minister’s approach, suggesting the initiative may be stalled before it even begins.
“The challenge is that Prime Minister is facing a host of problems of her own creation,” Dr Browne said.
He argued that Persad-Bissessar remains persona non grata in Venezuela following what he described as an unnecessary escalation of hostile rhetoric between the two countries.
“In the normal course of diplomacy, a mission to Venezuela such as the one grandly announced by the Prime Minister would be contingent upon our receipt of a letter of invitation from the Government of Venezuela,” Browne added.
“Let’s see if such correspondence is received, because until then the Prime Minister’s announcements will be merely wishful thinking and her usual empty bravado.”
