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Will U.S. Intervention in Venezuela Change Prices at the Pump?

Will U.S. Intervention in Venezuela Change Prices at the Pump?
U.S. companies face high hurdles to pump Venezuelan oil into the market.
Trump lays out U.S. takeover of Venezuelan oil
On Jan. 3, the U.S. military struck Venezuela, capturing Maduro and his wife and extraditing them to New York on drug-trafficking charges. Hours later, Trump said the U.S. would “run” Venezuela, opening its vast oil reserves and critical minerals to American firms. In the days that followed, Trump detailed what controlling Venezuela’s oil would look like. In a Jan. 5 post on Truth Social, he said the U.S. would receive between 30 million and 50 million barrels of sanctioned Venezuelan oil, with proceeds controlled by the U.S. government. He said, “This Oil will be sold at its Market Price, and that money will be controlled by me, as President of the United States of America, to ensure it is used to benefit the people of Venezuela and the United States!” » Stay informed: Stay informed: Check out NerdWallet's news hub for all the latest. Subscribe to one of NerdWallet's free newsletters. Two days later, Trump said Venezuela would be allowed to buy “ONLY” American-made products with revenue from the 30 million to 50 million barrels of oil. That same day, White House officials confirmed plans to assume control of Venezuela’s oil sector for an indefinite period. Trump reinforced that message in a Jan. 8 interview with The New York Times, saying the U.S. would maintain a long-term presence in Venezuela to extract oil from its reserves. “We’re going to be using oil, and we’re going to be taking oil,” Trump said, framing the move as a route to lowering oil prices and “giving” money to Venezuela. The New York TimesWhy tapping Venezuela’s oil reserves isn’t so simple
Despite its vast reserves, accessing Venezuela’s oil is far more complex than the president’s familiar “drill, baby, drill” approach. Venezuela holds the world’s largest proven oil reserves, largely concentrated in the Orinoco Belt in the country’s east. A founding member of OPEC, Venezuela was once one of the world’s top oil producers, pumping out roughly 3.5 million barrels per day at its peak. That dominance has since collapsed. In 2012, Venezuela produced roughly 2.65 million barrels per day, according to an analysis of OPEC data. Today, output has fallen to under 1 million barrels per day. The decline reflects decades of structural damage to the country’s energy sector due to a combination of factors: Mismanagement by the state-run oil company PdVSA. Chronic underinvestment, which led to disrepair of oil fields, pipelines and refineries. U.S. and international energy sanctions, which curtailed exports to the U.S. As a result, China largely absorbed most of Venezuela’s crude oil sales. Heavy, dense crude that is costly and technically challenging to extract. Years of political instability and corruption under Maduro and his predecessor Hugo Chávez. BAYTOWN, TEXAS - In an aerial view, the Exxon Mobil Baytown Refinery is seen on January 13, 2026 in Baytown, Texas. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images News via Getty Images) Venezuela isn’t just an oil story — the country sits on some of the world’s largest natural gas reserves. They remained largely untapped due to the same challenges that impaired its oil industry. Yet the country’s long-term energy potential remains significant. A July 2023 Congressional Research Service (CRS) report found that, at current production levels, Venezuela has enough natural gas reserves to last over 300 years. By comparison, the U.S. has just under 14 years’ worth of proven reserves, the report said. The upside could be enormous if oil production in Venezuela is rebuilt. The CRS analysis projects that if Venezuela produced natural gas at the same rate as the U.S., it would boost its annual production from 19 billion cubic meters (BCM) to 450 BCM — enough to meet domestic demand and supply exports. In theory, that means Venezuelan oil and gas could eventually be extracted and shipped to the U.S. where it can be refined and sold. In practice, restoring production won’t come cheap or quick. It will take billions of dollars in investment to remedy Venezuela’s crumbling oil infrastructure, all while navigating a tenuous political landscape following Maduro’s removal.Industry experts say a stable Venezuela is the prerequisite
"The oil industry is a long-term industry," says Jaime Brito, executive director of refining and oil Products for Chemical Market Analytics by OPIS, a Dow Jones Company. "Anybody that will be willing to bring their money and their resources into Venezuela will need to make sure that the country is stable, that there's rule of law." Beyond politics, Brito points to three major hurdles that U.S. officials and investors must clear: Extensive infrastructure decay from years of neglect and mismanagement. The need for a stable, investor-friendly fiscal regime. A shortage of skilled workers. "A good percentage of the highly technical skilled people that were working in Venezuela in the ’90s and early 2000’s left the country," says Brito, and many of them now support oil operations in Colombia, Mexico and the United States. The scale of the challenge is immense. Rystad Energy, a global consultancy based in Norway, estimates it would take 16 years and $110 billion to restore Venezuela’s oil infrastructure and raise production to 2 million barrels per day.What could happen to gas prices?
If oil production in Venezuela rebounds substantially, gas and diesel prices could fall by 5%, 10% or even more, estimates Brito. But that kind of relief would require Venezuela to push out 4 million to 5 million barrels per day, levels it has never reached in the past. There’s also a bigger, longer-term scenario. If Venezuela dramatically boosts production — and other nearby oil producers like the U.S., Guyana, Brazil and Canada did the same — that collective could rival or even surpass production coming from OPEC countries. A surge in supply like that would alter OPEC’s global oil market power and put downward pressure on prices. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. In the near term, the U.S. is focused on making Venezuelan oil usable. According to a Jan. 7 Energy Department fact sheet, the U.S. plans to roll back select sanctions and ship U.S. light crude oil into Venezuela to help “optimize” production of Venezuela’s heavy oil. From there, the oil would likely be sent to refineries in the U.S., likely on the Gulf Coast. Brito says for Gulf Coast refineries, Venezuelan crude is "exactly the diet that their digestive system needs," because heavy oil pairs well with lighter U.S. crude. That blend of heavy and light crude can help refiners operate more efficiently — and potentially pass savings on to consumers.Meet MoneyNerd, your weekly news decoder
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Tempering expectations, any price relief tied to Venezuelan oil would likely be modest at first and take time to materialize in a meaningful way. There is one way to see indirect downward pressure on prices. Canada is by far the largest foreign supplier of crude oil to the U.S., but the more cheap crude oil from Venezuela in the U.S. market, the more Canada will have to compete, Brito says. In turn, Canadian producers might have to cut prices, which could eventually lower what you pay at the pump. Still, as AAA said in an email to NerdWallet, “It’s too soon to know if/how domestic gas prices may be impacted.” And here’s the key takeaway for drivers right now: Gas prices are already low, and it has nothing to do with U.S. involvement with Venezuela. Crude oil has fallen to its lowest levels since 2021, bringing fuel prices in the U.S. to under $3 in most states. According to AAA data, gas prices at the start of the year are at the lowest since 2021. All of this U.S. focus on oil comes at a time when much of the world, including China, is trying to move away from carbon-based fuels and develop cleaner energy technologies, in the interest of slowing human-induced climate change.