The return of Venezuelan oil is not bearish. It will take three years to add 1 million barrels per day (bpd), while global demand growth and natural decline rates will require 15 million bpd of new supply. Furthermore, investment in Venezuela will be diverted from other projects, negating the net supply increase.

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The prospect of reviving Venezuela's vast but dormant oil industry introduces significant potential for increased global supply. Morgan Stanley suggests this could suppress prices in the medium-term, a counter-intuitive outcome where resolving geopolitical tension leads to lower commodity prices rather than higher ones.

While beneficial for U.S. refiners, a resurgence in Venezuelan production could harm U.S. shale producers. They would face not only lower overall oil prices but also a potential shift in marginal supply growth away from shale towards Venezuela over the next decade, diminishing their market position.

The oil market's lack of reaction to the events in Venezuela demonstrates a key principle: short-to-medium term prices are driven by current production and delivery capacity, not the theoretical size of underground reserves that may take years and billions to develop.

J.P. Morgan's research projects Venezuela could reach 1.4 million barrels per day in two years, but feedback from industry players suggests these numbers are "too low." This indicates that the U.S. administration and energy executives anticipate a much faster and larger production ramp-up than currently modeled.

A potential restart of Venezuelan oil is significant because it is a heavy, diesel-rich crude that has become scarce as U.S. shale dominates supply with light oil. U.S. Gulf Coast refiners, built decades ago, are specifically configured to process this heavy crude, creating a unique high-margin opportunity.

A rapid rebound in Venezuelan oil production is improbable, even with massive investment. The effort is constrained by fundamental infrastructure failures, like a deeply unreliable national power grid, which is essential for running upgraders and refineries. This makes a quick recovery lasting years, not months.

Despite holding the world's largest oil reserves (17%), Venezuela's contribution to global production is minimal (<1%). This critical gap between reserves and output explains why major geopolitical events in the country have little immediate impact on global oil supply or prices.

Venezuela produces heavy sour crude, which only specialized refineries can process. U.S. Gulf Coast refiners like Valero are poised to benefit from a cheaper, more abundant feedstock. This new supply could displace more expensive Canadian and Mexican crude, improving refinery margins.

The 30-50 million barrels of Venezuelan oil the White House claims to be releasing is not new supply. It's largely oil that was already produced but couldn't be exported due to the U.S. blockade. Releasing it is more of a reversal of a self-inflicted disruption than an injection of fresh barrels into the market.

Market fears of Venezuelan oil flooding the market are misplaced. Experts estimate it will take at least three years and significant investment to bring just one million barrels per day of production back online. The immediate supply Venezuela can offer is minimal, making the news irrelevant to the 2026 price outlook.