MediumBusinessJanuary 4, 2026

Venezuela’s Oil Today: Reserves, Production, and Recent Events

EasyMediumHard|

Key Vocabulary

Orinoco Belt /ˌɔːrɪˈnoʊkoʊ bɛlt/

Meaning: A large oil region in eastern Venezuela with heavy crude.
Example: Many of Venezuela's reserves are in the Orinoco Belt.

extra-heavy /ˌɛkstrəˈhɛvi/

Meaning: Very dense oil that is hard to extract and sell.
Example: Extra-heavy oil needs blending.

sanctions /ˈsæŋkʃənz/

Meaning: Official penalties that limit trade and investment.
Example: Sanctions reduced foreign investment.

blockade /bləˈkeɪd/

Meaning: An action that stops ships or trade from entering or leaving ports.
Example: The blockade affected exports.

🎧 Listening

Venezuela’s Oil Today: Reserves, Production, and Recent Events

Venezuela holds the world’s largest proven crude oil reserves, about 303 billion barrels, concentrated in the Orinoco Belt. Although these reserves are vast, most are extra-heavy crude that must be upgraded or blended before it is saleable. The extraction and processing require specialized techniques and large investment, which have been limited by long-term mismanagement and international sanctions.

Production has fallen sharply from past highs and now stands at roughly one million barrels per day, while exports have shifted toward Asia through barter and complex shipping arrangements. PDVSA, the state oil company, has been the main source of government revenue but has struggled to maintain wells and refineries. Sanctions and a U.S. blockade in late 2025 have cut exports and led shipping firms to avoid Venezuelan ports. PDVSA has stored crude on tankers while exports slowed, and some cargoes were seized. In early January 2026, U.S. forces struck in Venezuela and captured President Nicolás Maduro; the U.S. president said the United States would run Venezuela temporarily and involve U.S. oil companies to repair oil infrastructure.

174 words

❓ Quiz

Q1. How many barrels of oil does the article say Venezuela holds?
Q2. Where are most of Venezuela's reserves concentrated?
Q3. What has PDVSA stored on tankers while exports slowed?

📖 Reading Practice

Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.

💬 Discussion

1.

Do you worry when international news mentions sanctions? Why or why not?

2.

Have you ever changed travel or shipping plans because of news about ports? What happened?

3.

What do you think about companies from other countries helping to fix big projects? Is it good or risky?

4.

Would you feel safer if local leaders managed natural resources, or if foreign firms helped? Why?