Venezuela has the largest proven oil reserves in the world — but most of it is too thick and acidic to extract economically at current prices.
How to Play: Guess if the country on the right has MORE or FEWER proven oil reserves than the one on the left.
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Top 10 Countries by Proven Oil Reserves
‘Proven reserves’ are oil that geologists believe is recoverable with current technology and prices. The figures fluctuate as technology improves and oil prices change. Most of the world’s reserves sit in just five countries.
| # | Name | Reserves (billion barrels) | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Venezuela | 303.80 | billion barrels |
| 2 | Saudi Arabia | 267.20 | billion barrels |
| 3 | Iran | 208.60 | billion barrels |
| 4 | Canada | 163.60 | billion barrels |
| 5 | Iraq | 145 | billion barrels |
| 6 | UAE | 111 | billion barrels |
| 7 | Kuwait | 101.50 | billion barrels |
| 8 | Russia | 80 | billion barrels |
| 9 | United States | 55.30 | billion barrels |
| 10 | Libya | 48.40 | billion barrels |
How Oil Reserves Are Estimated
Proven oil reserves are calculated by national oil companies and ministries, then aggregated by industry bodies like OPEC, BP Statistical Review of World Energy, and the US Energy Information Administration (EIA). ‘Proven’ means recoverable at current prices and current technology with high confidence (usually 90% probability).
Venezuela’s reserves jumped dramatically in 2011 when the Orinoco Belt’s heavy oil was reclassified as ‘proven’ rather than ‘unproven.’ This single accounting change put Venezuela ahead of Saudi Arabia. In practice, most of Venezuelan oil is bitumen-rich and expensive to refine — pumping volumes are far below Saudi production.
Saudi Arabia’s reserves remain the world’s most economically extractable. Production cost averages $3-5 per barrel — among the lowest globally. By contrast, Canadian oil sands cost $30-50 per barrel, US shale oil $40-60. When global prices fall, low-cost producers can keep pumping while higher-cost producers must scale back.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which country has the most oil reserves?
Venezuela, with 303.8 billion barrels of proven reserves. Most of it is heavy/sour oil that is expensive to refine.
How is oil 'reserve' different from 'production'?
Reserves are how much oil is recoverable. Production is how much is actually pumped each day. The US produces more daily oil than Saudi Arabia despite having fewer reserves.
Will oil reserves run out?
Reserves have grown over decades, not shrunk — improving extraction technology converts previously-unrecoverable oil into ‘proven’ reserves. The ‘peak oil’ debate has shifted from supply to demand (climate policy).
Why does Canada rank high?
Canada’s reserves are dominated by Alberta’s oil sands — bitumen-rich deposits requiring expensive surface mining or steam injection. The reserves are large but expensive to produce.
Note: Reserves in billion barrels per OPEC and BP Statistical Review 2024. Country claims sometimes differ; widely-cited values used here.
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