Venezuela’s Oil Today: Reserves, Production, and Recent Events
Key Vocabulary
Orinoco Belt /ˌɔːrɪˈnoʊkoʊ bɛlt/
extra-heavy /ˌɛkstrəˈhɛvi/
upgrading /ˈʌpɡreɪdɪŋ/
blockade /bləˈkeɪd/
PDVSA /ˌpiːdiːviːˈɛs eɪ/
🎧 Listening
Venezuela’s Oil Today: Reserves, Production, and Recent Events
Venezuela sits atop the world’s largest proven crude oil reserves, about 303 billion barrels, but most of that volume is extra-heavy crude in the Orinoco Belt that cannot be produced and sold like lighter crudes. Extracting and marketing Orinoco oil requires upgrading, steam injection, or blending with lighter crude and large capital investment, and those processes have been constrained by years of mismanagement and limited foreign involvement.
Output has fallen from several million barrels per day in past decades to roughly one million barrels a day today, as aging wells and damaged refineries have reduced capacity. International sanctions and a U.S. blockade in late 2025 further reduced exports; shipping firms have avoided Venezuelan ports, PDVSA has stored crude on tankers, and some cargoes were seized. PDVSA remains the state oil company and owns foreign refining assets such as CITGO, which have been entangled in legal disputes.
On 3 January 2026 U.S. forces struck inside Venezuela and captured President Nicolás Maduro, and the U.S. president said the United States would run Venezuela temporarily and involve U.S. oil companies to repair oil infrastructure. PDVSA reported no physical damage to core production and refining sites, but tanker movements and port operations were disrupted, creating immediate logistical challenges.
Nevertheless, even if foreign companies return and new investment flows, recovery will be gradual because extra-heavy crude needs complex processing and because infrastructure has been neglected for years. Consequently, restoring Venezuela to its former output will take significant time, expertise, and capital. International legal and financial hurdles will also delay projects.
❓ Quiz
📖 Reading Practice
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💬 Discussion
Do you worry about energy supply when you hear about foreign conflicts? How does it affect you?
Have you ever noticed fuel prices change after big news events? What was the effect?
What do you think about foreign firms working on large energy projects in your country?
Would you feel comfortable with clearer information about where your fuel comes from? Why or why not?
How do you react when you hear that infrastructure has been neglected for years? Have you seen this locally?