
Venezuela possesses the largest proven oil reserves on the planet—over 300 billion barrels, significantly more than Saudi Arabia. Yet, its oil production has collapsed from a peak of over 3 million barrels per day (bpd) in the late 1990s to roughly 1 million bpd today.
This was not an overnight accident. It was a slow-motion dismantling of a world-class industry. Here is the detailed breakdown of how it happened.
1. The “Brain Drain”: Purging the Experts (2002–2003)
In the 1990s, the state-run oil company, PDVSA (Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A.), was widely respected as one of the best-run national oil companies in the world. It operated on a strict system of “Meritocracy”—you got promoted because you were a good engineer, not because you had political connections.
- The Strike: In late 2002, PDVSA management and workers went on a general strike to protest the increasing political control by President Hugo Chávez. The strike paralyzed the country.
- The Purge: In retaliation, the government fired over 18,000 employees—nearly 40% of the workforce.
- The Consequence: These weren’t just low-level workers; they were the top geologists, reservoir engineers, and managers. They took with them decades of “institutional memory.” PDVSA lost the ability to solve complex technical problems, and the new hires were often selected for political loyalty rather than technical skill.
