Quote from: Josquius on Today at 11:03:55 AMQuote from: Jacob on January 08, 2026, 09:37:52 PMKrugman has a writeup on how the vast oil reserves of Venezuela may be somewhat overstated: https://paulkrugman.substack.com/p/the-emperors-new-oil-wealthInteresting to think they might have oversold their own overthrow.
The two key points IMO are:QuoteYou may have heard that Venezuela has the world's largest oil reserves — 300 billion barrels. You probably don't know that Venezuela's reported oil reserves tripled while Hugo Chavez was president. This increase, from roughly 100 billion to 300 billion barrels, didn't reflect major new discoveries or exploration. Instead, it reflected the Chavez government's decision to reclassify the country's Orinoco Belt heavy oil as "proved" — oil that can be recovered with reasonable certainty under existing economic and operating conditions
andQuoteAs Torsten Slok of Apollo, who recently made this point, notes, "Much of the oil is extra-heavy, which has low recovery and a high cost to produce." This suggests that Venezuela's claims to have immense usable oil reserves were politically motivated hype.
Quote from: Jacob on January 08, 2026, 09:37:52 PMKrugman has a writeup on how the vast oil reserves of Venezuela may be somewhat overstated: https://paulkrugman.substack.com/p/the-emperors-new-oil-wealthInteresting to think they might have oversold their own overthrow.
The two key points IMO are:QuoteYou may have heard that Venezuela has the world's largest oil reserves — 300 billion barrels. You probably don't know that Venezuela's reported oil reserves tripled while Hugo Chavez was president. This increase, from roughly 100 billion to 300 billion barrels, didn't reflect major new discoveries or exploration. Instead, it reflected the Chavez government's decision to reclassify the country's Orinoco Belt heavy oil as "proved" — oil that can be recovered with reasonable certainty under existing economic and operating conditions
andQuoteAs Torsten Slok of Apollo, who recently made this point, notes, "Much of the oil is extra-heavy, which has low recovery and a high cost to produce." This suggests that Venezuela's claims to have immense usable oil reserves were politically motivated hype.
Quote from: HVC on Today at 09:41:35 AMUAE deems UK universities have too high a risk of Islamist indoctrination, cancels scholarships
Quote from: Richard Hakluyt on Today at 10:03:09 AMThere was a plentiful supply of oil in 2025 and the price fell from 79$ to 63$. This is with Russia, Iran and Venezuela being sanctioned and also a generally weak dollar. If the price falls further then shale oil production in the USA becomes unprofitable (the breakeven cost seems to be between 45$ and 70$ a barrel). I just can't see why the oil companies would want to waste money investing in an unstable country given these facts.
I suppose Venezuelan oil could substitute for oil from Alberta if Trump wanted to put the squeeze on Canada?
Quote from: Richard Hakluyt on Today at 10:03:09 AMI suppose Venezuelan oil could substitute for oil from Alberta if Trump wanted to put the squeeze on Canada?
Quote from: HVC on Today at 09:18:31 AM'I don't need international law': Trump says power constrained only by 'my own morality'
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