Why Sanctions Relief Alone Won’t Fix Venezuela’s Oil Industry

Why Sanctions Relief Alone Won’t Fix Venezuela’s Oil Industry


After the latest political shock in Venezuela, speculation has surged over the prospects of a recovery for the country’s oil industry. On paper, Venezuela still holds the world’s largest proven oil reserves. In reality, production remains a fraction of what it once was.

How quickly Venezuela’s oil production ramps up will depend in part on what happens with sanctions. But Venezuela’s collapse did not begin with sanctions, nor can sanctions relief alone undo the damage. However, that could have a significant short-term effect.

The country’s oil decline has two primary elements. One is structural damage that began years earlier and will take many years to repair. The other is sanctions-driven disruption that arrived later and shut in barrels much more quickly. Understanding the difference is essential to understanding what might come next, and why sanctions will likely impact Venezuela’s oil future in the near-term.

Venezuela’s oil decline traces back to the 2007 expropriations. That year, the government forced foreign operators into minority positions and seized assets when companies such as ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil rejected the new terms.

These were not simple oil fields. The Orinoco Belt is among the most technically demanding heavy oil regions in the world. Sustaining production requires advanced reservoir management, steady diluent supply, and multi-billion-dollar upgraders to make the crude usable. When foreign operators left, they took future investment capital, technical expertise, operational discipline, and project management systems.

Venezuela’s state?owned oil company, PDVSA, was awarded the assets but not the capabilities. Maintenance deteriorated. Equipment failed. Skilled workers left. Production began falling years before oil sanctions were imposed, a trend clearly visible in the following graphic.

The steep decline in Venezuela’s oil production after 2015 was driven by the internal collapse of PDVSA, which was marked by political purges, mismanagement, loss of technical staff, and the deterioration of critical infrastructure.

This damage cannot be reversed quickly. Rebuilding infrastructure and restoring a technical workforce is a multi-year effort even under stable political conditions.

The second layer arrived in January 2019, when the United States sanctioned PDVSA directly. Earlier sanctions targeted individuals and had little impact on production. The 2019 measures were different.


finance.yahoo.com
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