Let me quickly break down the major events currently unfolding in Venezuela. Since oil is one of my areas of expertise, I will try to be concise and clear in my views, and I'm making this free to read. If you like my analysis, please help share it.
Dictator Nicolás Maduro, the bus driver turned autocrat, has been responsible for tens of thousands of deaths, 8 million people fleeing into exile, and the oppression of 34 million people. And all of this stems primarily from the curse of oil wealth, corruption, and the "warm of collectivism." Yes, the resource curse is very real.
Today, the U.S. government announced the successful capture of Maduro in a special military operation. According to reports, Maduro and his wife have been transported from Caracas to the United States, are currently detained at an undisclosed location, and are set to be prosecuted in New York on charges of "narcoterrorism" and "drug trafficking."
So, what happens next? We don't know yet. But if Trump decides to reclaim U.S. oil assets that were expropriated by the Venezuelan government, or even temporarily takes over the country to rebuild its institutions, I fully support it. And if you think deeply about it, you should too.
Why? Because for decades, Venezuela's elite have proven incapable of escaping the "resource curse." Such a policy would be a blessing for humanity and freedom, as well as for peace. Why do I say that?
The reason is that Venezuela is not just any ordinary OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) member, as you can see from the OPEC production table I've included below. (Note: The mentioned actions by Trump and the U.S. government are hypothetical discussions and not factual. Readers are advised to distinguish accordingly.)
In fact, Venezuela has the largest oil reserves in the world, and the quality of its conventional oil is on par with Saudi Arabia's. In other words, it has the potential to significantly impact global oil prices, just like Saudi Arabia. Generally speaking, lower oil prices (which is what Trump desires) are often considered a blessing for peace and prosperity.
Before diving into geological conditions and oil production, let's return to basic principles. In my humble opinion (I am Swiss, not a U.S. voter), Trump's view that "U.S. oil assets should be returned to their legitimate American owners" is correct. This is clearly his stance. So yes, this intervention is not just about drugs; it's also closely tied to oil, and I fully support this position.
As a resource investor, I am tired of seeing dictators and regimes around the world seize Western assets without fair compensation, while Western leaders either turn a blind eye or hide behind procedures and polite statements.
We should not reward corrupt leaders, now or in the future. We should firmly uphold the rule of law when Western corporate interests are violated. Even if you disagree with me (which is perfectly fine), as a resource investor, you should be relieved because Trump may have, to some extent, reduced the above-ground risks for all commodities in emerging markets, at least in the short term.
In any case, Venezuela has the largest oil reserves in the world, much of which originally belonged to Western companies that discovered and developed these reserves. These companies not only developed part of the resources but also paid the required taxes to the host country.
The Orinoco Belt alone represents the largest accumulation of oil on Earth, with an average estimated technically recoverable heavy oil volume of about 513 billion barrels. In terms of reserves, i.e., the portion proven economically recoverable, Venezuela accounts for about 20% of the world's known reserves.
However, in a market with a total daily oil demand of about 85 million barrels (note: this excludes the total liquid fuel production of about 103 million barrels per day), Venezuela's oil production accounts for only 1%.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the consequence of socialism and corruption.
Under Maduro's rule, people have even died on the streets from hunger for years. The next time someone tries to sell us the "warmth of collectivism," remember this.
It's worth noting that OPEC's oil reserve data is often inflated because these figures determine their production quotas. This is why every seasoned geologist will tell you that, for example, Kuwait's heavy oil reserve data is overstated.
However, if you carefully study the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) reports, you'll find that Venezuela's heavy oil resources are unlikely to be overestimated.
Even if the medium viscosity of the Orinoco Belt halves the ultimately recoverable amount, other resources are highly likely to be discovered elsewhere, including offshore Venezuela (such as neighboring Guyana).
So, no matter how you look at it, this is a huge "cake," and in the long run, it has the potential for significant production growth.
If the U.S. oil industry and the global oil services sector are allowed to develop this "treasure," Venezuela will surpass Saudi Arabia's production within the next decade.
Mark my words, I'm telling you now.
The conventionality and richness of these oil fields are so high that once the advanced technology of today's oil industry is fully applied to these reserves, their potential will be immeasurable.
American entrepreneurship has already squeezed 9.8 million barrels of oil per day from hard shale.
Venezuela's oil resources are like a Texas-sized swimming pool filled with oil, just waiting to be extracted, pipelined, and utilized. This is the last frontier of oil wealth.
Growth in oil production will be a blessing for all aspects: massive tax revenues, high-paying jobs, and an explosive growth in related service industries—from oil services to construction, from leisure and entertainment to hospitality, a complete ecosystem will form.
Imagine the prosperity of Texas, but on a larger scale.
The left may describe it as "colonialism." But as Texas and Norway have shown, this is called capitalism.
Capitalism works well in environments with sound institutions, but it struggles in emerging markets lacking effective governance.
This is a fact, and you can quote me anytime, anywhere.
Under the right conditions, Venezuela's oil production can increase rapidly, and even a "modest" increase will have a huge impact in a commodity market where marginal prices are determined.
Currently, Venezuela's oil production is about 900,000 barrels per day. If property rights and the rules of the game are fixed, raising production to 1.5 million barrels per day within 18 months is a realistic initial goal. This growth will be led by international oil majors with the most experience, strongest financial resources, and largest outstanding claims, including Chevron, ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, and possibly Shell and Italy's ENI.
These companies have suffered losses in the past and still have significant unpaid amounts to recover. Reportedly, ConocoPhillips alone has over $10 billion in outstanding claims. However, it's important to note that, apart from Chevron, these oil giants are unlikely to actively participate until political stability is achieved, the actual rulers of the country are clear, and a solid, unalterable legal framework is established.
If bottlenecks in infrastructure such as pipelines, electricity, upgrading, and ports are resolved, a return to 3.5 million barrels per day is achievable. But note that big numbers can be misleading. Assuming it takes $60 billion to restore pipeline, power, and export infrastructure to normal, that may sound like a huge amount, but consider that in 2010 alone, the U.S. shale oil industry invested more than that in drilling.
The capital exists, the capability exists, and the key determinant of speed is the legal framework.
Without a stable legal environment, not much will change.
If the rules are changed after Trump, or if Venezuela simply goes from one corrupt mess to another, production will at best remain between 1.5 million and 3 million barrels per day. This is the worst-case scenario. However, if the rule of law is truly implemented, reaching 10 million barrels per day within the next decade is not a fantasy. It's simply the natural outcome of world-class resources being developed by a world-class industry.
The key point is: Even without achieving the best-case scenario, simply making Venezuela a stable producer of 5 million barrels per day (similar to Canada today) and maintaining that level for decades to come would at least offset the production decline from maturing U.S. shale fields. In a market where marginal barrels determine prices, this would be a huge impact.
In fact, you don't even need to wait for Venezuela's oil production to reach 5 million barrels per day. Just the increase from the current 900,000 barrels to 1.5 million barrels next year, this trend alone is enough to impact Brent crude prices, as the market is already in a "surplus state" for 2026 and 2027.
Yes, physical commodities are priced based on current demand, not future expectations. But in the oil market, the number of "paper barrels" traded far exceeds the physical volume of the actual market, and market expectations often drive price fluctuations before the physical oil arrives.
Recall the fourth quarter of 2018, when Trump single-handedly pulled Brent crude from $90 to $55 per barrel just with changes in Iran sanction waivers and tone, without almost any actual supply changes.
In any case, long-term low oil prices are a blessing for all humanity.
I want to further explain my views and preemptively respond to critics who might question my predictions. After all, consulting firms like Energy Aspects always try to make things sound more complicated.
First, without being modest, I have invested directly or indirectly in the oil industry for twenty years. I have been to more remote oil fields than many industry "keyboard experts." I have experienced success and failure with my own money, not someone else's.
I have spent hundreds of hours analyzing this market from scratch, from single wells to countries to every barrel of oil globally. I have used almost all serious data tools, from Kpler to OilX, Kayrros, JODI, and services from major institutions. At one point, I really felt I could almost track the flow of every barrel of oil in real time. So trust me, when I simplify the analysis here, I have a basis for it.
Second, of course, I cannot accurately predict future production; it's not a physics problem. It is path-dependent, meaning it entirely depends on what happens next. If Trump doesn't follow through on his plans, if property rights issues aren't resolved, if Venezuela just goes from one corrupt mess to another after Maduro's downfall, then nothing will change, or there will only be marginal changes.
But if Trump gets it right even halfway, believe me, Venezuela's prospects will exceed expectations. These wells will be "monsters," and the industry will be able to develop these resources at record speed, provided political interference is kept out.
However, these key conditions must be established first. The starting point for driving oil production growth lies in property rights protection, the rule of law, and a free market economy. Without these foundations, even with abundant oil reserves, significant growth is difficult to achieve. Maybe by the end of 2027, production could reach 1.5 million barrels per day? Who knows.
Third, and this is something most people overlook, Venezuela is not starting from zero. It is known in the industry as a "brownfield," meaning its oil fields already have some development foundation. Currently, Chevron is already producing about 300,000 barrels of oil per day in Venezuela. They received permission during the Biden administration, and Chevron's history in Venezuela dates back nearly 100 years.
This means Chevron has decades of geological data, production history, and operational experience. ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil left in 2007, when then-President Hugo Chávez forcibly renegotiated contracts with all oil majors, including European companies.
Thus, these oil giants already know where the oil fields are, what technologies work, which equipment is prone to failure, and how to scale up production. They likely have more detailed data than Venezuela's state oil company, PDVSA. This provides a huge first-mover advantage for any revival plan.
Because of this, Venezuela's situation is not like that after the Soviet Union's collapse. Back then, Western companies were blocked for political reasons and had to learn everything from scratch. The oil industry is not just about pipelines and pumps; it involves logistics, engineering, process management, and massive amounts of data. Once this knowledge is mastered and the rules of the game are clear, capital and capability will naturally follow.
Of course, there are still many uncertainties. But even a medium outcome, such as production of 4 to 5 million barrels per day, would structurally change the global supply and demand balance for liquid energy. Believe me, it would be a brutal shock, as Venezuela would produce some of the cheapest oil in the world. This change would be profound. We can only hope it materializes.
For those skeptical about significant oil production growth in Venezuela, I want to offer another perspective. The United States once accomplished a feat that seemed equally absurd. U.S. shale oil production grew from 1.8 million barrels per day in 2010 to 9.8 million barrels per day by the end of 2025. In other words, American entrepreneurship squeezed out a "Saudi Arabia"-sized oil production from rock. If you add production from Alaska and the Gulf of Mexico, the U.S. total oil production is now about 13.8 million barrels per day, a whole new level higher than what most people thought possible 15 years ago.
So, the question is: Why is shale oil extraction so complex? Compared to conventional onshore oil fields, shale oil extraction is exceptionally difficult. In conventional fields, oil is usually stored in "natural tanks" made of limestone or sandstone, and the oil and gas flow naturally. Shale oil, however, is trapped in dense source rock with extremely low porosity and permeability, meaning the oil almost cannot flow on its own.
In shale fields, you can't simply "drill a well" and let it produce naturally. Instead, you need to "assault" the rock with horizontal drilling, multi-stage fracking technology, and massive amounts of equipment, personnel, water, sand, steel, and capital, just to release a small amount of oil.
Moreover, each shale oil well yields only hundreds of thousands of barrels, unlike conventional fields that can provide millions or even tens of millions of barrels and sustain for years. In contrast, shale oil wells typically peak within months, and then you need to drill the next well.
This phenomenon is known in the industry as the "Drilling Frenzy."
The shale revolution is one of the greatest industrial achievements of our time. It's not just a geology story; it's the result of incentives, property rights, technology, logistics, and capital markets all working together.
Now compare this achievement to Venezuela, especially the Orinoco Belt. Whatever you think about heavy oil, yes, it faces upgrading and processing challenges, but from the pure perspective of "can we get the oil molecules out of the ground," compared to shale, extracting heavy oil from the Orinoco is much easier.
A quick look at the chart above gives you a numerical comparison. Shale permeability typically ranges from 0.001 to 0.1 millidarcies, while the permeability of heavy oil reservoirs in Venezuela's Orinoco Belt is usually between 1,000 and 13,000+ millidarcies. This is not a simple rounding error; it's a difference of several orders of magnitude.
The same goes for porosity. The best Permian shale typically has a porosity of 4% to 8%, while Orinoco heavy oil sands have a porosity between 20% and 38%. So, ask yourself a simple question: If politics were taken out of the equation, which resource would you rather drill and produce? Which one do you think has a lower full-cycle breakeven cost?
Yes, the rapid development of U.S. shale oil was fueled by three strong tailwinds.
First, property rights. In places like Texas, landowners typically own the mineral rights under their land, which directly incentivizes them to develop these resources.
Second, the oil services ecosystem. Texas has a large and decentralized oil services industry that can mobilize quickly and compete effectively.
Third, financing capability. The U.S. has the deepest debt and equity markets in the world, and shale oil was funded on a massive scale even when it seemed impractical to outsiders. Combine these factors, and you get the rapid rise of the shale oil industry.
But the key point is: Even with these tailwinds, shale oil is a technical nightmare compared to the traditional onshore resources of the Orinoco Belt. If American capitalism could create a "Saudi Arabia" from tight rock in 15 years, then once Venezuela establishes effective property rights and basic rule of law, the global oil and gas industry will flock to the Orinoco Belt as what it should be—the world's last great frontier of oil wealth. Because it truly is.
Will Trump accept the political risk of nation-building in this situation?
The answer is yes. This is actually his explicitly stated goal, expressed in the most straightforward way a president can. You can listen to him yourself.
The Trump administration will not leave easily. They want to reclaim oil assets, rebuild the oil industry, and hope to compensate for past expropriations and losses. This is their strategy, clear and simple.
My view? Be very bearish on oil prices. Trump's statements are significant. From my perspective in the oil industry, this is a game-changer. Of course, it won't happen overnight, but it will change step by step, every day. You've been warned.
Furthermore, I don't think this administration faces the risks typically described by critics. This is not fighting a hostile insurgency in Afghanistan, nor is it trying to transplant Western institutions in an Islamic political order like Iran or Afghanistan, where there is inherent hostility to Western values.
This is Venezuela. It is culturally Western, overwhelmingly Christian, and before it was systematically destroyed by socialists Hugo Chávez and Nicolás Maduro, it was a successful beacon. This country can be fixed.
Now let's zoom out. This is not just a story about Venezuela; it's a story about global oil prices, and thus a geopolitical story. Venezuela has the potential to structurally bring about long-term low oil prices, or at least maintain current low prices (all else being equal). If this materializes, it will cut off the "financial oxygen" funding the war in Ukraine, weaken the Kremlin's grip, and significantly reduce the geopolitical influence of certain major powers.
And before that happens, another chain reaction might begin, such as the potential collapse of hardline regimes in other countries that also have vast untapped oil reserves waiting for the "invisible hand" of the rule of law to release them.
All of this would break the funding chains of terrorism sponsors, whether in Qatar or elsewhere. And all of this, ladies and gentlemen, is a blessing for peace and humanity.
In the coming weeks, you won't hear these points from the so-called progressive left "do-gooder" Marxist worshippers. But the fact is, low oil prices are one of the greatest drivers of peace and prosperity. Yet, few truly realize this.
Instead, the left will raise all sorts of objections, no matter how absurd, until they inevitably end up siding with murderers and dictators. Sadly, this is the rule of the game in today's traditional media, which is completely partisan.
January 3, 2026, President Trump held a press conference on Venezuela. Of course, the situation in Venezuela is far from over, and the final outcome is not yet settled. But if good luck, sustained courage, and the right decisions continue to accompany Trump, he might truly deserve a Nobel Prize. From my perspective, he is currently moving in the right direction.
So, credit where credit is due. We should praise or criticize each action based on its actual performance, not on partisan lines. President Trump and his team, well done.
Please don't try to criticize this precise and highly successful military operation for even a second. Salute it, as I have.
Best regards,
Alexander
















