Author: Deep Tide TechFlow
On January 3, 2026, the U.S. military launched a "large-scale" strike against Venezuela, and President Maduro was swiftly arrested and transferred.
Some commented, "One who issued a Memecoin arrested the one who issued an RWA Token."
Indeed, that was the case.
On February 20, 2018, Venezuelan President Maduro announced in a televised address the issuance of the world's first digital currency backed by a sovereign state, the Petro (Petro).
At that time, Venezuela was mired in its worst economic crisis in history, with inflation soaring to nearly 1,000,000% (you read that right), the national currency Bolivar depreciating like waste paper, and severe U.S. sanctions further exacerbating the plight of this South American oil giant.
Maduro pinned his hopes on this digital currency as the last straw to save the nation.
However, in early 2024, when the Venezuelan government quietly terminated the operation of the Petro, the world did not even cast many surprised glances.
This digital symbol, once hailed as the "world's first sovereign cryptocurrency," had almost never truly "lived" during its brief existence. Its end was like the silent curtain fall of a noisy drama, drawing a conclusion to a magical realist story revolving around encryption technology, national sovereignty, and economic collapse.
The fate of the Petro reflects the comprehensive collapse of a nation's governance system.
Born from Ruins: The Emergence of the Petro
To understand the Petro, one must first understand Venezuela before its birth.
It was a nation scorched by hyperinflation, where the value of the old currency, the "Bolivar," evaporated by the hour, and people's lifelong savings vanished overnight. Meanwhile, severe financial sanctions from the United States, like an invisible noose, tightened around Venezuela's economic lifeline, almost cutting it off from the global financial system.
It was on this economic ruin that the Petro emerged, bearing an almost impossible "nation-saving" mission.
Its blueprint was grand and enticing.
First, the Petro would bypass the U.S.-dominated international financial system via blockchain, opening a new channel for financing and payments. Second, it was claimed that each Petro was backed by a barrel of real oil reserves, with 100 million Petros totaling a value of $60 billion.
In August 2018, Venezuela officially established the Petro as its second official currency, circulating in parallel with the already devastated Bolivar.
The Maduro government's efforts to promote the Petro were unprecedented.
Pensions for the elderly were distributed in Petro, and Christmas bonuses for civil servants and military personnel were also converted into this digital currency. Maduro even "airdropped" 0.5 Petro to the nation's retirees as a Christmas gift during a live television broadcast in late 2019.
Beyond forced domestic promotion, Venezuela also attempted to recruit more countries to use the Petro.
Time Magazine once爆料 that the Petro received Putin's personal approval, with Russia sending two advisors to participate in the project design. The Russian side promised to invest in the Petro and considered using this digital currency for bilateral trade settlements to jointly combat dollar hegemony.
Venezuela also tried to promote the Petro to member states of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), hoping to create a de-dollarized oil trade system. Oil Minister Quevedo publicly stated: "The Petro will become a settlement means accepted by all OPEC member states."
To get more people to use the Petro, the Maduro government transformed into a crypto project team, building complete infrastructure, providing detailed purchase tutorials on its official website, even developing four ecosystem apps, and authorizing six exchanges including Cave Blockchain and Bancar to publicly sell the Petro.
But reality soon dealt the Maduro government a heavy blow.
Public Apathy and Skepticism
The Venezuelan government's enthusiastic promotion met with collective public apathy.
Under Maduro's Facebook post announcing the Petro's issuance, the most liked comment read: "Unbelievable that someone still approves of this terrible government... They are destroying the whole country." Another popular comment said: "The government is used to making every stupid thing end in failure and then blaming other countries."
Venezuelan media personality Gonzalo's evaluation on Twitter was more pointed: "The Petro is the anesthetic of this failed state."
Disastrous user experience further exacerbated public distrust. Petro registration review was extremely strict, requiring uploads of ID card front and back, detailed address, phone number, and other information, but applications were often inexplicably rejected. Even if one managed to register successfully, the "Patria Wallet" system was frequently problematic and often unusable.
Worse was the payment experience. Many merchants reported Petro payment failures, forcing the government to admit system defects and provide compensation.
One Venezuelan woman said: "Here, we don't feel the existence of the Petro."
Externally, the U.S. government also delivered precise blows against the Petro.
In March 2018, just one month after the Petro's issuance, Trump signed an executive order completely prohibiting U.S. citizens from purchasing, holding, or trading the Petro. The Treasury Department's statement clearly stated that any transaction involving the Petro would be considered a violation of sanctions against Venezuela.
The scope of sanctions quickly expanded. In 2019, the U.S. placed the Moscow-based Evrofinance Mosnarbank on its sanctions list, citing the bank's provision of financing services for the Petro. The U.S. Treasury bluntly called "the Petro a failed project attempting to help Venezuela evade U.S. economic sanctions."
A Shitcoin Cloaked in Oil
The most fatal problem with the Petro was that it was untenable both technically and economically.
The soul of a true cryptocurrency lies in the trust brought by decentralization. The Petro, however, was a completely government-controlled centralized database.
For an ordinary Venezuelan, this meant the value of the Petro in their digital wallet was not determined by the market but could be arbitrarily changed by a presidential decree.
The Venezuelan government claimed that each Petro was backed by a barrel of oil from the Ayacucho region, specifically the town of Atapirire, with reserves of 5.3 billion barrels. But Reuters reporters visiting the site found dilapidated roads, rusting oil well equipment, the entire area overgrown with weeds, showing no signs of large-scale oil extraction.
Rafael Ramírez, the former Venezuelan oil minister in exile, estimated that extracting the promised 5.3 billion barrels would require at least $20 billion in investment, a sheer fantasy for a Venezuelan government that couldn't even import basic foodstuffs.
Ramírez bluntly stated: "The Petro was set as an arbitrary value; it only exists in the government's imagination."
Even more absurdly, the Venezuelan government later quietly modified the Petro's backing assets, changing from 100% oil backing to a mix of oil, gold, iron, and diamonds in proportions of 50%, 20%, 20%, and 10%.
This practice of随意修改 (arbitrarily modifying) the "white paper" is considered highly disreputable even in the crypto world.
Technical issues were equally severe. The Petro claimed to be based on blockchain technology, but its block explorer showed extremely abnormal data. The white paper stated the Petro should generate a block per minute like Dash, but the actual block interval was 15 minutes, and on-chain transaction records were almost zero.
Unlike the price fluctuations of truly decentralized digital currencies like Bitcoin, the Petro's price was completely controlled by the government. The exchange rate was arbitrarily adjusted from an initial 1 Petro for 3600 Bolivars, to 6000, and later to 9000.
Although the government announced the official price of the Petro was $60, on the black market in the capital Caracas, people could only exchange it for goods worth less than $10 or U.S. dollar cash—if they were lucky enough to find someone willing to accept it.
The Petro was essentially a control tool cloaked in blockchain attire.
The Final Blow: Internal Corruption
If the Petro's life was slowly withering away, the final straw that broke its back was a staggering internal corruption scandal.
On March 20, 2023, an "earthquake" shook Venezuelan politics.
Tareck El Aissami, a core member of the Maduro government and the Oil Minister, suddenly announced his resignation.
Days earlier, Venezuelan anti-corruption police had arrested his right-hand man, Joselit Ramírez Camacho, the head of the National Superintendency of Cryptoassets and Related Activities (SUNACRIP), the core agency responsible for regulating and operating the Petro.
As the investigation deepened, a massive fraud scheme involving billions of dollars came to light.
Attorney General Tarek William Saab disclosed that some senior government officials used the parallel operation of the cryptocurrency regulatory agency and oil companies to sign oil loading contracts "without any administrative control or guarantees." The corresponding payments from oil sales were not paid to the state oil company but were transferred to private pockets via cryptocurrency.
The investigation revealed that this corruption network involved amounts between $3 billion and $20 billion, with these embezzled funds used to purchase real estate, digital currencies, and cryptocurrency mining farms.
In April 2024, Oil Minister El Aissami was arrested, facing multiple charges including treason, money laundering, and criminal association. Over 54 people were prosecuted for allegedly participating in this corruption scheme.
This corruption scandal dealt a devastating blow to Venezuela's cryptocurrency industry. SUNACRIP was forced to suspend operations, and the government subsequently launched a nationwide anti-mining campaign, confiscating over 11,000 ASIC miners and disconnecting all cryptocurrency mining farms from the national grid.
By 2024, the government halted Petro transactions, demanded a nationwide halt to cryptocurrency mining, and shut down all authorized cryptocurrency exchanges. An industry once vigorously promoted by the government completely collapsed under the impact of the corruption scandal.
The Petro experiment failed completely, not vanquished by Washington's禁令 (ban), but dead from its own rot.
A tool designed to combat external sanctions ultimately became a tool for corrupt officials to launder money.
A Microcosm of National Failure
The failure trajectory of the Petro almost replicates the failure logic of Venezuela's national governance.
It was a "treating the head for a foot ailment" type of policy. Facing deep-seated economic structural problems, the government chose to create a flashy gimmick, attempting to掩盖 (cover up) the real economic rot with a digital illusion. It was like facing a building tilting due to a collapsing foundation, and the manager just paints a bright coat of paint on the exterior wall.
The Maduro government tried to solve institutional problems through technical means, which itself was a mistaken approach. The value foundation of a digital currency remains the credit of the issuing entity. In a country with inflation reaching millions of percent, where basic living supplies cannot be guaranteed, what credibility does the government have left? How could the populace, who don't even trust the traditional currency issued by the government, possibly accept a brand new digital currency concept?
The Petro instead consumed the last remnants of government credibility.
Imagine this scene: a retired teacher, her life savings already devoured by inflation, now receives her monthly pension强制换成 (forcibly converted into) Petro. She takes her phone, goes from store to store, and the answer is always gets is "we don't accept this," or "the system is broken."
The root of Venezuela's economic problems is a fundamental defect in its economic structure. Venezuela suffers from the typical "Dutch disease," where over-reliance on oil exports led to the decline of manufacturing and an extremely单一 (monolithic) economic structure. When oil prices fell, the entire national economy collapsed. The Petro attempted to use oil as an anchor, but this恰恰 (precisely) intensified the economy's dependence on oil without solving the structural problems.
In practice, the Venezuelan government lacked the basic technical and operational capacity to implement a blockchain project, and the project was riddled with flaws from the start. From abnormal block data to payment system failures, to the arbitrariness of the price mechanism, every detail exposed its amateurish level, even worse than a Shenzhen外包工作室 (outsourcing studio).
Today, the Petro has completely disappeared into the dust of history. Maduro's "nation-saving experiment" ended in miserable failure. Venezuela remains mired in the quagmire, its people continuing to suffer in the fires of inflation.
The real way out for this country clearly does not lie in finding the next digital shortcut like the "Petro," but in mustering the courage to face reality, return to common sense, and initiate the long-overdue yet extremely difficult real transformation.







