"There is no quick and easy solution to the problems that accumulated over a quarter century," Raymond James analyst Pavel Molchanov said in a note.
Venezuela's crude output has dwindled to well under one million barrels per day after years of underinvestment, mismanagement, and sanctions — a far cry from around 3.5 mbd in the late 1990s.
Don't expect a huge boost unless and until there's a secure operating environment, clear fiscal regime, an easing of sanctions and more...
Researchers with Columbia University's energy think tank estimate that reaching around 2.5 mbd would take $80 billion to $90 billion of investment in oil infrastructure over six or seven years.
A new Rystad Energy analysis estimates an all-in cost of $183 billion needed to get north of 3 mbd over 15 years, split between state-owned PDVSA, national spending and private operators. Full story
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