Venezuela says it has the world's largest reserves of crude oil. Making it viable is a whole other problem.

Key Points

  • Venezuela claims to have the world's largest crude oil reserves, estimated at 300 billion barrels, though this figure is self-reported and unverified by independent experts.
  • Historically, Venezuela's reserves were reported at around 100 billion barrels until a reclassification in 2013 by the state-run PDVSA, despite flat production levels.
  • Experts suggest a more realistic reserve estimate is closer to 100-110 billion barrels due to low recovery rates and lack of audits.
  • Venezuela's oil industry has declined due to corruption, mismanagement, and infrastructure issues, requiring significant investment (estimated at $180 billion by 2040) to revive production.
  • The heavy, sulfurous nature of Venezuelan oil makes extraction and refining more complex and costly, posing challenges for potential investors.

Summary

Venezuela, despite exporting less than 1% of global oil, remains a focal point in the energy market due to its claim of possessing the world's largest crude oil reserves, estimated at 300 billion barrels. This self-reported figure, published by OPEC but not independently verified, contrasts with expert estimates of 100-110 billion barrels due to low recovery rates. Historically, reserves were reported at 100 billion until a 2013 reclassification by state-run PDVSA, even as production stagnated. The country's oil industry has crumbled under corruption, mismanagement, and infrastructure neglect, particularly in the Orinoco Heavy Oil Belt, requiring an estimated $180 billion by 2040 to restore past production levels of 3 million barrels per day. The heavy, sulfurous nature of Venezuelan oil adds complexity and cost to extraction and refining, deterring investment. Current low oil prices (Brent crude around $60 per barrel) and the global market's lack of need for new barrels further diminish interest from major oil companies, including Chevron, the only consistent US operator in Venezuela. Despite geological potential, political and financial challenges, alongside a push for capital discipline among US oil majors, make revitalizing Venezuela's oil sector a daunting task, even with US government encouragement for investment.

yahoo
January 7, 2026
Stocks
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