- A White House official tells CBS News that the administration is not seeking the regime’s collapse, but rather that it “abandon its communist system.”
- University of Texas expert Jorge Piñón estimates that during the first 13 months of Mexico’s Sheinbaum administration, the average was 8,700 barrels.

14ymedio, Madrid, January 13, 2026 — The U.S. government will not prevent Mexico from supplying oil to Cuba, Energy Secretary Chris Wright said in an interview with CBS.
Despite President Donald Trump’s remarks on Sunday, when he said on social media that “there will be no more oil or money for Cuba: zero,” the official stated that the policy will be to “allow” Mexico to continue delivering crude oil to Cuba.
In addition, another official told the network, speaking anonymously, that the administration is not seeking the government’s collapse, but rather that it “abandon its communist system.”
The U.S. believes, this official said, that a total cutoff or embargo on Cuba would be a “shock to the already overloaded and decrepit power grid,” which posts deficits of more than 1,500 megawatts (MW) almost daily. This same Monday, an impact of more than 1,700 MW was expected during peak hours, and the main cause was, as is now customary, the lack of fuel, which left 1,020 MW out of service.
The U.S. believes, the official said, that a total cutoff or embargo on Cuba would be a “shock to the already overloaded and decrepit power grid.”
“The economic condition of Cuba is serious,” the official told CBS News, reminding the network that the Island has been selling Venezuelan oil to China to obtain some liquidity. With the fall of Nicolás Maduro following the U.S. attack on January 3, there was uncertainty over whether the U.S. would allow crude to continue reaching Cuba.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum held a conversation on Monday with her U.S. counterpart in which they discussed security issues, just days after Trump threatened continue reading
Shortly afterward, when asked during her morning press conference, Sheinbaum offered herself as a “vehicle of communication” between the U.S. and Cuba, a topic that, as she herself clarified, was not part of the issues discussed.
“Obviously, if Mexico were to become a vehicle for communication between the United States and Cuba, both parties would have to accept it, evidently,” she said.
Trump had said on Sunday that there were talks with Cuba and that more would be known soon, but hours later Miguel Díaz-Canel assured that such contacts do not currently exist, beyond the usual conversations the two governments maintain on migration issues.
“We have always been willing to engage in serious and responsible dialogue with the different governments of the United States, including the current one, on the basis of sovereign equality, mutual respect, principles of international law, reciprocal benefit, non-interference in internal affairs, and full respect for our independence,” he added.
Not obstructing oil shipments from Mexico could be a mechanism for the U.S. to force negotiations in which, in light of officials’ comments, the Cuban government would have to open itself to eventual democratization and/or economic liberalization.
Not obstructing oil shipments from Mexico could be a mechanism for the U.S. to force negotiations in which, in light of officials’ comments, the Cuban government would have to open itself to eventual democratization
On January 9, the tanker Ocean Mariner arrived at the port of Havana with around 85,000 barrels of fuel from Veracruz, marking Pemex’s first crude shipment to Cuba this year.
In 2023, exports amounted to about 16,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil and derivatives, worth around $300 million. In 2024, cooperation increased to 20,100 bpd, a 20% rise, although derivatives fell by 18%, with an estimated total value of $600 million.
Between January and September 2025, Mexico supplied Cuba through the Pemex subsidiary Gasolinas Bienestar with around 19,200 barrels per day to Cuba, divided, according to official documents, into 17,200 barrels of crude and 2,000 of derivatives. University of Texas expert Jorge Piñón estimates that during the first 13 months of the Sheinbaum administration (between October 2024 and November 2025, the average was 8,700 barrels per day.
Sheinbaum has stated on more than one occasion that all governments prior to hers have supplied oil to the Island, including those of Enrique Peña Nieto and Felipe Calderón, and that the commitment to Cuba is “historical,” not ideological.
Translated by Regina Anavy
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