Energy CX Blog

What the U.S./Venezuela Conflict Means for the Energy Market

Written by Energy CX | Jan 13, 2026 3:15:01 PM

Geopolitical headlines have a way of moving energy markets fast—often faster than the fundamentals behind them. The recent U.S. conflict with Venezuela could considerably impact energy markets. While the geopolitical situation has sparked immediate reactions in energy futures, the real implications for U.S. energy buyers are more subtle.

Here is everything you need to understand about the Venezuela conflict’s impact on energy markets:

Big Picture:

Venezuela’s political and energy sector turmoil is moving markets, but not because supply fundamentals changed overnight.

Following the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on January 3, 2026, the U.S. signaled plans to take operational control of Venezuela’s energy sector. While reports pointed to U.S. energy futures falling, the reality is that more time and work would be required to make that happen.

Markets reacted to the idea of future supply—not actual barrels or molecules hitting the system today.

This kind of “rosy expectation pricing” often creates opportunity. When markets price in best-case scenarios long before they materialize (if they ever do), it can be a good time to lock in fixed prices.

Why Fixed Prices Are Low Right Now:

To understand today’s price movement, it helps to zoom out.

For decades, Venezuela’s energy production has been in decline. Crude oil output has fallen from roughly 3.5 million barrels per day to about 1.1 million, due to mismanagement, sanctions and underinvestment. Analysts see potential for future output increases if investment and structural reform occur, which could possibly lower oil prices in the long run.

According to Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), Venezuela holds nearly one fifth of global oil reserves, many of which are associated with oil operations and are underdeveloped due to infrastructure and policy constraints. For context, the U.S. only holds 2.9% of global oil reserves.

Venezuela’s natural gas sector remains an underutilized resource that could become important if political and policy conditions shift. Much of the country’s gas output is associated with gas tied to oil production, meaning gas growth hinges on oil sector recovery.

Overall, there is no immediate risk at the moment to U.S. deregulated natural gas pricing. U.S. gas markets could eventually benefit from structural integration of Venezuelan gas supplies if infrastructure and commercial frameworks are restored. However, this is a multi-year development that’s not immediate and comes with no guarantees.

Bottom Line:

The conflict in Venezuela highlights how geopolitical events appear suddenly and almost always impact the energy industry in some way. Uncertainty isn’t new; but disciplined strategies are how you win in an unpredictable market.

No one knows how fast the country could stabilize, if sanctions will be removed or whether infrastructure investment actually materializes. Regardless, this is a good opportunity to reevaluate your energy strategy and make sure it can outlast a volatile market.