CRUDE OIL: Countries With The Largest Proven Reserves
Did you know that the world derives over a third of its total energy production from oil, and that 14 countries make up 93.5 per cent of the proven oil reserves globally?
Oil is a natural resource formed by the decay of organic matter over millions of years, and like many other natural resources, it can only be extracted from reserves where it already exists. The only difference between oil and every other natural resource is that oil is well and truly the lifeblood of the global economy.
The world derives over a third of its total energy production from oil, more than any other source by far. As a result, the countries that control the world’s oil reserves often have disproportionate geopolitical and economic power. According to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2020, 14 countries make up 93.5% of the proven oil reserves globally. The countries on this list span five continents and control anywhere from 25.2 billion barrels of oil to 304 billion barrels of oil. At the end of 2019, the world had 1.73 trillion barrels of oil reserves.
Here are the 14 countries with at least a 1% share of global proven oil reserves according to rank, country, oil reserves (billion barrels – bb) and share of global reserves (%).
#1 🇻🇪 Venezuela 304bb, 17.8%
#2 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia 298bb, 17.2%
#3 🇨🇦 Canada 170bb, 9.8%
#4 🇮🇷 Iran 156bb, 9.0%
#5 🇮🇶 Iraq 145bb, 8.4%
#6 🇷🇺 Russia 107bb, 6.2%
#7 🇰🇼 Kuwait 102bb, 5.9%
#8 🇦🇪 UAE 98bb, 5.6%
#9 🇺🇸 United States 69bb, 4.0%
#10 🇱🇾 Libya 48bb, 2.8%
#11 🇳🇬 Nigeria 37bb, 2.1%
#12 🇰🇿 Kazakhstan 30bb, 1.7%
#13 🇨🇳 China 26.2bb, 1.5%
#14 🇶🇦 Qatar 25.2bb, 1.5%
While these countries are found all over the globe, a few countries have much larger amounts than others. Venezuela is the leading country in terms of oil reserves, with over 304 billion barrels of oil beneath its surface. Saudi Arabia is a close second with 298 billion, and Canada is third with 170 billion barrels of oil reserves.
A country with large amounts of reserves does not always translate to strong production numbers for petroleum, oil, and by-products. Oil reserves simply serve as an estimate of the amount of economically recoverable crude oil in a particular region. To qualify, these reserves must have the potential of being extracted under current technological constraints.
While countries like the U.S. and Russia are low on the list of oil reserves, they rank highly in terms of oil production. More than 95 million barrels of oil were produced globally every day in 2019, and the U.S., Saudi Arabia, and Russia are among the world’s top oil-producing countries, respectively.
Venezuela has long been an oil-producing country with heavy economic reliance on oil exports. However, in 2011, Venezuela’s energy and oil ministry announced an unprecedented increase in proven oil reserves as oil sands in the Orinoco Belt territory were certified.
The nearly 200 billion barrels of proven oil reserves identified between 2005 and 2015, pushed Venezuela from fifth in the world to number one. As a result, South and Central America’s proven oil reserves more than doubled between 2008 and 2011.
In 2002, Canada’s proven oil reserves jumped from 5 billion to 180 billion barrels based on new oil sands estimates. Canada accounts for almost 10% of the world’s proven oil reserves at 170 billion barrels, with an estimated 166.3 billion located in Alberta’s oil sands, and the rest found in conventional, offshore, and tight oil formations.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is an intergovernmental global petroleum and oil distribution agency headquartered in Vienna, Austria. The majority of countries with the largest oil reserves in the world are members of OPEC. Now composed of 14 member states, OPEC holds nearly 70% of crude oil reserves worldwide. Most OPEC countries are in the Middle East, the region with the largest oil reserves, holding nearly half of the global share.
Though most of the proven oil reserves in the world were historically considered to be centered in the Middle East, in the past three decades their share of global oil reserves has dropped, from over 60% in 1992 to about 48% in 2019. One of the main reasons for this drop was constant oil production and greater reserves discovered in the Americas. By 2012, Central and South America’s share had more than doubled and has remained just under 20% in the years since.
While oil sands ushered in a new era of global oil reserve domination, as the world shifts away from oil consumption and towards green energy and electrification, these reserves might not matter as much in the future as they once did.
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