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Page added on July 17, 2016

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Venezuela’s oil production just sank to a 13-year low

Production

Venezuela’s oil production plunged to a 13-year low in June as the economic crisis continues to eat into the nation’s only source of export revenue.

Venezuela’s oil production has declined by 170,000 barrels per day since the start of 2016, dipping to 2.18 million barrels per day (mb/d) in June, according to the IEA’s latest Oil Market Report.

Part of that was due to electricity blackouts that cut 120,000 barrels per day from the country’s output between April and June, but even with some of those issues resolved – rain has restored some output at hydroelectric dams – the IEA says that “further losses are expected in 2H16.”

A year-on-year decline in oil production of 200,000 barrels per day “looks unavoidable as foreign oil service companies reduce their activity and international oil companies face repayment issues and daily operational challenges.” But 200,000 barrels per day could be just the start.

Venezuela does have some of the largest oil reserves in the world, but much of its oil production occurs at mature fields that require maintenance. But maintenance requires cash, something that is increasingly scarce in the country.

Venezuela’s state-owned PDVSA was already failing to properly invest in oil production even when oil prices were in triple-digit territory several years ago. In fact, production has been gradually declining for more than a decade. The problem is that the declines are now accelerating.

In the mature oil fields around Lake Maracaibo in the west, wells are depleting as investment falls short. The IEA says that even in the Orinoco Belt in the southeast output is falling because PDVSA is struggling to process the heavy crude due to a shortage of light crude for blending.

Venezuela has long predicted that it would be able to ramp up production from its heavy oil fields in the Orinoco Belt, which holds some of the largest heavy oil reserves in the world and accounts for half of the country’s output, in order to compensate for the aging fields in the Maracaibo region. The predictions were always overoptimistic, but now they are entirely off the table.

graph 1 OilPrice.com

The biggest threats to Venezuela’s oil supply are above-ground issues, not related to oil per se. Food and medicine shortages are creating a humanitarian crisis that worsens by the day. President Maduro, despite his stranglehold on power, is increasingly unpopular. The opposition is trying to remove him from power through a recall referendum, but the outcome is uncertain.

Meanwhile, Venezuela has more debt that falls due in the third and fourth quarters. Strangely, the Venezuelan government has always prioritized meeting payments to bondholders even if that means people going hungry in the streets. But steeper bond payments come later this yearwith $1.4 billion due in October and another $2.8 billion maturing in November. With hard currency running low, it is unclear if those payments can be met. Even if they are, paying off creditors does not do much for the country’s oil sector. Production should continue to fall throughout this year and there are very few, if any, reasons for optimism.

OilPrice.com



2 Comments on "Venezuela’s oil production just sank to a 13-year low"

  1. rockman on Sun, 17th Jul 2016 11:17 am 

    Not complicated: don’t maintain the infrastructure and production declines. Declining production is damanging enough but add the oil price decline and it’s all the more difficult. And to pull in foreign capital requires confidence of those companies that their investments will provide acceptable returns. Returns that will require Vz giving up a portion of the revenue stream. And while that produces less income in the future then if the govt had maintained the system it will still create more revenue then the current path.

    But after years of vilifying foreign companies it may be very difficult to gain public support. And the situation does not bode well for Cuba which has been dependent upon cheap/free Vz import. In exchange Cuba had been providing tech personnel especially lots of medical.

    BTW for those folks who drone on and on about the lack of value of condensate/light oil notice how that shortage is restricting Vz production. Those lighter chains are also ctitical for the import of 3+ million bbls per day of Canadian oil as well as for US refiners to blend with their heavy oil purchases so as to optimize the cracking process.

  2. IPissOnLosers on Mon, 18th Jul 2016 8:02 pm 

    Venezuela oil has an EROEI between 0 and 1. Venezuela oil is an energy sink not an energy producer. Same for Canadian tar sand. Energy sing sources are being shut down because of depletion of conventional oil source and low energy content of unconventional oil sources.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qGM9ypR-UI

    go at 36:35 where someone says IP say that EROEI on oil sand is between 0 and 1.

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