Context:
Despite possessing the world’s largest proven crude oil reserves, Venezuela exemplifies the resource curse, where excessive dependence on a single natural resource, combined with mismanagement and external sanctions, has led to prolonged economic collapse and marginalisation in global energy markets.
Key Highlights:
Oil Wealth and Production Decline:
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Venezuela holds 303 billion barrels of proven crude oil reserves (2023) — the largest globally.
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Crude oil production in 2024 stood at ~921,000 barrels per day, a sharp fall from over 3 million bpd in the 1980s.
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Venezuela’s share of global oil exports declined from over 4% in the 1990s to ~0.35% in 2023.
Role of U.S. Sanctions:
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U.S. sanctions (since 2017) restricted Venezuela’s access to:
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International financial markets
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U.S.-based assets of PDVSA
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Essential diluents needed to process extra-heavy crude
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Recent enforcement measures include naval actions to curb Venezuelan oil exports.
Nature of Venezuela’s Oil Reserves:
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Predominantly extra-heavy crude oil, requiring:
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Advanced extraction technology
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Specialised refineries
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Chronic underinvestment and poor maintenance have rendered infrastructure inefficient.
Institutional and Governance Failures:
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After the early 2000s coup attempt and oil lockout, the state-owned firm PDVSA became highly bureaucratised.
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Loss of skilled professionals led to:
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Declining technical expertise
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Reduced operational efficiency
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Political interference undermined professional management.
Failure to Diversify the Economy:
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Unlike other OPEC nations, Venezuela failed to diversify exports beyond oil.
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High vulnerability to:
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Oil price volatility
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External sanctions
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The oil boom of the 1970s (post-Yom Kippur War) temporarily raised per capita income, but structural weaknesses persisted.
Relevant Prelims Points:
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Issue: Economic collapse due to oil dependence and sanctions.
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Causes:
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Over-reliance on hydrocarbons
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Weak institutions and mismanagement
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External economic sanctions
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Key Facts:
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Largest proven oil reserves globally
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Member of OPEC
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Benefits of Diversification (Missed):
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Economic resilience
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Reduced external vulnerability
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Challenges:
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Infrastructure decay
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Capital and technology constraints
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Impact:
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Shrinking export share
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Humanitarian and economic crisis
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Relevant Mains Points:
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Facts & Definitions:
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Petrostate: Economy heavily dependent on oil revenues.
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OPEC: Organisation coordinating petroleum policies of member states.
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Sanctions: Economic and financial restrictions to influence state behaviour.
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Conceptual Clarity:
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Resource Curse: Natural resource wealth can weaken institutions and growth if mismanaged.
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Sanctions amplify internal structural weaknesses rather than create them alone.
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Keywords:
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Rent-seeking, institutional decay, energy geopolitics, economic sanctions
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Way Forward (Analytical):
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Diversification beyond hydrocarbons
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Professionalisation of state enterprises
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Gradual sanctions relief linked to reforms
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Investment in refining and value addition
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Strengthening governance and fiscal discipline
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UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 3: Economy – resource dependence, growth challenges
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GS 2: International Relations – sanctions, geopolitics, oil diplomacy
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Prelims: OPEC, sanctions, petrostate concept
