🚨🇺🇸🇻🇪 SEC. RUBIO TO JOURNALIST: YOU WANT US TO INVADE FIVE BASES AT ONCE? THE U.S. GOT MADURO, BE HAPPY WITH THAT Sec. Rubio just got grilled by a reporter who wanted to know one thing: if this was really about taking down a narco-terrorist regime in Venezuela, why stop with just Maduro? Why leave the rest of his crew in power, including the Defense Minister, who has deep ties to Russia and a $15M bounty on his head? Why didn’t the U.S. land in more military bases, arrest the whole network, and shut it all down? Rubio didn’t back off, he defended the limits and called the op a historic win. "It is not easy to land helicopters in the middle of the largest military base in the country, kick down his door, grab him, and leave without losing any Americans. You're asking me why we didn’t do that in five other places at the same time? I mean, that’s absurd. This is one of the most daring, complicated, sophisticated missions this country has carried out in a very long time. An indicted drug trafficker who was not the legitimate president of Venezuela was arrested, and now faces justice in the U.S. court system. The others who were also indicted are still in place." Source: @RapidResponse47 , @SecRubio
JUST IN: 🇺🇸🇻🇪 Crude oil prices fall following US capture of Nicolás Maduro. image
🇮🇷 2 KEY IRANIAN CITIES IN REVOLT AS DEADLY PROTESTS SPREAD NATIONWIDE Word's buzzing that protesters have straight-up seized the city of Hamadán, while the holy hub of Qom. Just 150 clicks from Tehran, is mostly under rebel control, cornering the regime like never before. Reports confirm raging demos in both spots for days, with clashes killing at least 4 in Hamadán and a teen in Qom amid grenade blasts and live fire from security goons. Nationwide unrest hit Day 8, sparked by economic meltdown, rials tanking, inflation at 52%, food up 70%, spreading to 174 spots with 19+ dead, hundreds nabbed, and IRGC cracking down hard. State media and rights groups paint ongoing battles, not full wins yet. Source: @TRobinsonNewEra , Iran International, Al Jazeera, Hengaw
🇺🇸🇻🇪 "MADURO'S CAPTURE WAS CAREFULLY PLANNED BY THE U.S." U.S. General Ben Hodges confirmed the operation to capture Maduro was as seamlessly successful as it was because the U.S. bypassed every defence the Venezuelan military had, something which required months of preparation. "We know that there were cyber operations that were initiated to turn off power, to do things like that. In all of these operations, you'd do everything you could to blind the enemy, so air defence couldn't shoot back, they couldn't track. It was a combination of cyber and traditional jamming; they had such good intelligence that had been built up over the past couple of months. Given the nature of Venezuela and this government, I would not be surprised to learn, on the inside, there was help."
I have spent a lot of time talking shit at people with opinions on Venezuela's oil production potential, and how it's going to "RePLaCe CanADa". So here's my contribution -- how I see the cost of replacing Canadian crude with Venezuelan heavy. I think it's a nearly $1 trillion bill to get that done. I'm not sure who has a spare $1 trillion in their jeans. Venezuela's natural domestic consumption is ~1MMB/d, so to completely replace Canada and reach 3MMB/d of export capacity, the country needs to grow production to ~4MMB/d of production, a level they have never hit before. Exports never really exceeded more than ~1.2MMB/d. They have one main export terminal (Puerto José) capable of ~1.2MMB/d and other smaller terminals gets them to realistically, 1.7MMB/d, so they need +1.3MMB/d in just export capacity and storage facilities, that's $5-10Bn. On the US side there needs to be minor import expansion, but not super major, around $1Bn. Then, they have to get the oil flowing north. You'd be able to repurpose some Canadian pipelines (if we assume no USGC re-export), but right now Mid-Valley Pipeline is the only major remaining heavy trunk line that moves oil from the USGC region northward into the Midwest. So you need +3MMBbls/d of crude pipelines that move crude north which would run around $30-50Bn. Then you also need a condensate return line for another $10Bn. Venezuelan crude has higher levels of metals and a higher TAN than Canadian exports, so you need to retool the refineries accepting the new sauce, that's another $50-90Bn on the tab. Cause there's not enough VLCCs in the world to service this, you also need to build new tankers for the shuttle service. 30 new VLCCs will cost $4-8Bn. Then onto the upstream. I'm going to say that if you're getting super majors to really invest in Venezuela, they're going to do tertiary recovery which is overwhelmingly the right play over 20+ years with current SAGD tech (SAGD wasn't commercial when Venezuela grew the first go-round). Using foamy oil to get to 4MMBbls/d and keep it there for 10-20+ years is impossible (we're replacing Canada so we need a 20+ year RLI). Right now, Venezuela produces oil cold, and uses depleting reservoir pressure to bring that oil to surface. For a true Canada replacement, you need heat, which is going to be expensive! But we're not building new upgraders (replacing Canadian heavy), but even then upgrading capacity is only ~0.7MMB/d. The problem is they don't have the power infrastructure to add the power needed for 3MMBbls/d of SAGD for steam generation, and even for primary recovery they don't have the electricity they need. So you need to build 10-15 GW of new power infra, at gas-fired capital cost including transmission and the new midstream infra to move gas (including LNG import terminals), that's another $40-75Bn just to get the power to the SAGD facilities. There are constant rolling blackouts in the country. You also need ~7-900MB/d of diluent looping on the Venezuela side, including DRUs for another ~$25Bn. Other local midstream refurb is at least $15Bn to replace ashphalted and corroded trunk lines. Any North American firm would also have to commit to cleaning up Lake Maracaibo which is a $10Bn commitment. For the actual upstream facilities, I'm just going to use a pretty general number based on 125% of Canadian Greenfield costs, so ~$45K/Bbl/d, and lets just call it 2.8MMB/d that's another ~$125Bn for the actual production facilities and ~$220Bn in sustaining CAPEX while everything ramps, and inevitable 5yr issues will add another $10Bn. There are also very little functional logistics infrastructure. The Tinaco-Anaco rail line was never completed, so you'd have to finish that. All copper has been inevitably stripped and looted, you'd have to rebuild all sorts of worker camps, airports/airstrips, rail spurs, trainload facilities. You'd need to re-dredge the Orinoco River ($15Bn), complete the Tinaco-Anaco line ($20Bn), build 1,000 miles of new heavy spec roads ($25Bn), and you'd need to refresh all of the civil infrastructure cause nobody from Houston is going to live in Venezuela as it stands. So you're going to shoulder that in wages, or Fort Mac copy-paste CAPEX for ~$40Bn. You are also, in the growth/construction and first 5 years going to spend $50-60Bn on paying employees/EPC/other contractors. You need at least 50,000 people in offices and fields to get this done. Of course, security too. Petrominerales spent ~$2.50/BOE on security, so +3MMB/d over 5 years is ~$10Bn on security. So all-in we're at ~$700Bn in both direct upstream costs, and indirect costs. All-in, this is a $1 trillion project to grow exports ~3MMB/d. There is short-term growth to be had, but it's not sustainable growth. There is also huge long-term potential, but it's not the same as drilling a pad in the Permian and ripping a tie-in to Energy Transfer. It's a freaking massive commitment. The country is pretty much dilapidated, and until super majors (and other infra builders) begin committing to the full-cycle costs associated with realizing the country's potential, the upside is not as robust as many would want you to believe. - Export terminal ($8Bn) and import refresh ($1Bn) - Pipelines from USGC to Midwest ($40Bn) and then a condensate return line ($10Bn) - Retooling refineries ($75Bn) - New tankers for shuttle service ($6Bn) - Lake Maracaibo clean up ($10Bn) - New power infrastructure for the upstream growth at a post-AI inflated capital cost ($60Bn) - New diluent looping ($25Bn) - Actual upstream production facilities and <5yr sustaining capital and issue contingency ($355Bn) - Full logistics and civil infrastructure overhaul (~$100Bn) and security ($10Bn). image
🚨🇻🇪🇺🇸🇮🇱 FREE MADURO, IMPRISON TRUMP & NETANYAHU