A sculpture of a hand holding an oil drilling rig stands outdoors the state-run oil firm Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) in Caracas, Venezuela, on February 26, 2025. Within the background are a avenue and a tall constructing.
Pedro Mattey/AFP through Getty Photographs
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Pedro Mattey/AFP through Getty Photographs
President Trump has made no secret that he needs U.S. oil corporations to revenue off his elimination of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro by investing in rebuilding Venezuela’s oil infrastructure and sharing within the cash that may observe.

Late Tuesday, he posted on Reality Social that Venezuelan authorities will flip over to the U.S. between 30 million and 50 million barrels of sanctioned oil, which is able to then be bought at market value, with the proceeds managed by Trump.
However seizing present oil manufacturing is one factor; overhauling Venezuela’s complete oil trade can be one other.
Impartial analysis agency Rystad Vitality has estimated it might take $183 billion over greater than a decade to revive Venezuelan oil manufacturing again to a Nineteen Nineties-era stage, greater than tripling it from its present charge of lower than 1 million barrels a day.
And corporations may be hesitant to hurry in — or, somewhat, rush again in. Chevron is the one U.S. oil firm nonetheless working in Venezuela; ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips left after the Venezuelan authorities forcibly renegotiated contracts round 2007, which price them billions of {dollars}. Worldwide courts have ordered Venezuela to reimburse Exxon and Conoco, a invoice that continues to be largely unpaid.
Venezuela’s once-thriving oil fields are tormented by energy cuts, corroded pipelines and stolen gear. However most of all, says Kevin Ebook, the managing director of impartial analysis agency ClearView Vitality Companions, “it is not only a geologic drawback or an engineering drawback, however a math drawback.” Particularly, this math drawback: Can corporations make a revenue off the large investments required to spice up manufacturing?
For now, the most important oil corporations haven’t publicly indicated what they’re planning on doing, they usually declined to remark for this story.
However analysts say the businesses should consider whether or not the political scenario in Venezuela will stabilize sufficient that they’d as soon as once more be prepared to commit billions of {dollars} to long-term initiatives.
An oil glut and low costs
One massive issue within the math drawback is that proper now, the world is making extra oil than it wants. By some calculations, the oversupply is roughly 2 million barrels per day, twice Venezuela’s whole present day by day manufacturing.
“If that appears like so much,” Ebook says, “it’s.”
And since the world has extra oil provide than demand, world crude costs are fairly low; the worldwide benchmark is slightly over $60 per barrel.
In the meantime, the breakeven value for initiatives in Venezuela to show a revenue is extra like $80, in accordance with Claudio Galimberti, the chief economist for Rystad Vitality.
“These corporations wouldn’t go there in the event that they know that the breakeven is $80 per barrel and that the prospects are for the subsequent two, three, 4 years, oil costs keep between $60 and $70 per barrel,” Galimberti says. “They will not do it, as a result of it is senseless.”
Corporations have been selective with their investments in recent times, specializing in ones which are prone to be worthwhile. That may appear apparent, however it hasn’t all the time been the case. About 15 years in the past, when new know-how like fracking unlocked the oil in shale formations within the U.S., corporations went slightly wild.
“The go-go days of shale tended to be a ‘drill first and work out the mathematics later’ time within the oil trade’s historical past,” says Ebook. “And it did not go that properly for lots of the corporations that produced first and requested questions later.”
Proper now, corporations are asking the questions first.
That does not imply they will not make investments. However Galimberti thinks they could require important incentives — subsidies — from both Caracas or Washington, in addition to proof of political stability.
Heavy, viscous crude
One other variable in that math drawback: The kind of crude oil that’s ample in Venezuela is type of gnarly.
“It is without doubt one of the heaviest and one of many dirtiest crudes that you could find,” Galimberti says.
Heavy crude is thick and sticky. It is tougher, and subsequently costly, to extract, transport and refine. Producing it additionally releases extra planet-warming gases than different kinds of crude, making it worse for the local weather.

That is an environmental mark towards Venezuelan crude. And it poses some logistical issues, like the necessity to import substances to dilute the crude sufficient for it to circulation by means of pipelines.
However economically, it is not as massive of a problem as you may suppose — it would even give corporations an incentive to pursue it.
That is as a result of U.S. refineries alongside the Gulf Coast are completely positioned to course of this difficult oil.
Many years in the past, these refineries invested in costly know-how for refining it, due to their geographic proximity to Venezuela, Mexico and Canada — all sources of heavy crude.
Then the shale revolution occurred, and the U.S. was flooded with gentle, candy crude that does not require this know-how.
In the present day, in accordance with the American Gasoline & Petrochemical Producers commerce group, 70% of U.S. refining capability is optimized for heavy crude — whereas the overwhelming majority of U.S. manufacturing is gentle crude.
So a few of that fancy know-how goes to waste. If the scenario in Venezuela stabilizes and oil corporations do transfer in and increase manufacturing, Galimberti says, U.S. refineries can be properly positioned to completely make the most of their current gear and earn more money.
A watch to the longer term
Then, in fact, corporations have to think about the lengthy sport. There’s an oil glut as we speak. However what occurs subsequent?

Oil demand might sink over time, relying on elements like gross sales of electrical autos and whether or not China — one of many largest world sources of vitality demand — transitions to renewables.
However then once more, possibly the world will keep hungry for oil. And both manner, corporations might want to make up for declining output from current, growing old wells — which implies drilling new ones.
And there aren’t many locations on the earth with as a lot oil potential as Venezuela.












