Richard Coffin cuts through the geopolitical noise to ask a brutally practical question that most headlines ignore: even if the United States seized Venezuela's oil, could it actually replace Canada? While the world fixates on the shock of a Delta Force raid and the capture of a head of state, Coffin argues that the real story isn't about regime change, but about the rigid, unyielding physics of pipelines and refinery capacity.
The Illusion of Substitution
Coffin immediately dismantles the popular narrative that the US can simply swap Venezuelan barrels for Canadian ones. He notes that while both nations produce heavy sour crude, "the US doesn't actually have the infrastructure to immediately substitute its Canadian oil imports." This is a crucial distinction often lost in the feverish speculation of online forums. The author breaks down the United States into five petroleum administration districts, pointing out that the Gulf Coast refineries—which handle Venezuelan oil—are not the primary processing hubs for Canadian crude.
"Today, only about 424,000 barrels per day are sent to that district by Canada. Instead, about 78% of Canada's crude oil exports are processed in pad 2 and four inland districts where 100% of the oil imported by refineries comes from Canada and where it's not really feasible to send Venezuelan oil given that pipeline infrastructure for crude oil tends to be southbound and transporting via freight is far less economic."
This evidence is compelling because it shifts the debate from political will to logistical reality. Coffin correctly identifies that moving oil north within the US to replace Canadian imports would require "billions of dollars of investment, state approvals, and years of planning and construction." Critics might argue that in a national security emergency, the US government could bypass these hurdles, but Coffin's analysis suggests that even with unlimited political capital, the physical time lag makes a quick substitution impossible.
The Cost of Reconstruction
The commentary then pivots to the Venezuelan side of the equation, where the challenges are even more daunting. Coffin highlights that Venezuela's oil industry is not just neglected; it is effectively broken. He cites Francisco Manaldi, who estimates that "Venezuela would need investments in excess of $100 billion to bring production above its peak to 4 million barrels per day in a decade."
"Because the National Oil Company is bankrupt and the country itself is in debt, there's not really any money internally to make that investment. So, they would have to rely on foreign investment to develop its industry."
This is where the author's skepticism about the "energy powerhouse" narrative shines. He points out that political instability remains a massive deterrent to the very foreign capital needed to fix the industry. The situation on the ground has not stabilized; instead, "pro Maduro armed militias now searching phones in the capital of Caracus and arresting journalists and citizens who spoke in support of Maduro's capture."
"You can imagine the challenges US companies would face trying to develop oil infrastructure in a country where armed groups are actively hostile against US involvement."
This observation is vital. It suggests that the assumption of a smooth transition to US-led development is a fantasy. Even if the interim government is cooperative, the security environment is hostile. A counterargument worth considering is that a strong US military presence could suppress these militias, but Coffin notes the US has not maintained a presence to address the power vacuum, leaving the risk of a violent struggle high.
The Bottom Line
Coffin's strongest contribution is his refusal to let the emotional weight of the regime change obscure the cold arithmetic of global energy markets. His biggest vulnerability is the assumption that political will alone cannot overcome infrastructure gaps, though history shows that wartime mobilization can sometimes defy standard economic timelines. The reader should watch not for a sudden drop in Canadian oil prices, but for the slow, expensive, and dangerous years of reconstruction that will likely define the next decade of US-Venezuela relations.
"It's incredibly early in the whole Venezuela situation, but there are some pretty big holes in this idea of completely substituting Canadian oil."