Oil And Energy In Latin America 2026: The Complete Guide
| Country | 2026 Production | YoY Change | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil (Petrobras equity) | 2.8 million boe/d target | +16.4% (Feb 2026) | Pre-salt FPSOs; Búzios expansion |
| Argentina | Heading toward 1 million bbl/d | +15.3% national; +30% Vaca Muerta | Vaca Muerta shale; RIGI incentives |
| Mexico (Pemex) | ~1.4–1.8 million bbl/d (target) | –7% annually (2025 actual) | Mature field decline; $21B investment attempt |
| Colombia (Ecopetrol) | ~735,000 bopd | Stable | Ecopetrol E&P; political uncertainty |
| Guyana (Stabroek) | 840,000 bbl/d average; 1.15M+ post-Uaru | +17.9% | ExxonMobil Stabroek; 5th FPSO arriving |
| Venezuela (PDVSA/Chevron) | ~1.0–1.1 million bbl/d | Recovery from sanctions | Chevron license expansion; post-Maduro reform |
ExxonMobil's Stabroek block off the coast of Guyana has become the most productive offshore oil development story of the decade. The block surpassed 900,000 bbl/d capacity in Q4 2025, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, and a fifth FPSO - the Errea Wittu, which will add 250,000 bbl/d under the Uaru project - completed assembly in Singapore and was on the verge of its voyage to Guyanese waters as of March 2026. After the Uaru arrival, total Stabroek capacity will exceed 1.15 million bbl/d. The seventh sanctioned project (Hammerhead, 150,000 bbl/d, start 2029) and a potential eighth non-associated gas project are in government review, pointing toward a total target of 1.7 million bbl/d by 2030 from a block that had produced nothing a decade ago.
The economic transformation of Guyana is without modern parallel among small nations. The country's GDP grew 19.3% in 2025 and is forecast at 16.2% in 2026, according to Reuters. The Natural Resource Fund reached $3.82 billion in early 2026 - a sovereign wealth pool accumulated entirely within a few years of first oil. The Iran/Hormuz price shock delivered an additional windfall: all Stabroek exports are Atlantic-facing and entirely unaffected by Persian Gulf disruption, while ExxonMobil's cost recovery timeline - originally modeled at $60/bbl - accelerated dramatically as prices approached $100 and beyond.
Venezuela: A Post-Maduro Oil Reset Under U.S. OversightVenezuela's energy sector is undergoing its most rapid institutional transformation in two decades following a January 3, 2026 U.S. military operation that captured President Nicolás Maduro. According to documented accounts of the intervention, Maduro was transferred to New York to face drug trafficking and terrorism charges, with Acting President Delcy Rodríguez sworn in by January 5. Within weeks, the National Assembly passed a sweeping oil industry privatization law - allowing private companies to control production and sales, introducing independent arbitration and production-sharing agreements, reducing taxes, and granting PDVSA operational autonomy - according to Reuters.
Production has recovered rapidly from the disruption caused by a U.S. naval blockade in January 2026. Output reached 924,000 bbl/d in January, recovered to 1.021 million bbl/d in February, and climbed to 1.095 million bbl/d by March, per Al Jazeera. The U.S. expanded Chevron's Venezuelan license in January 2026, allowing the company - which produces approximately 250,000 bbl/d - to sell extracted oil and receive cash payments rather than crude. A March 18 Treasury general license extended broad authorization to U.S. companies doing business with PDVSA. The political constraints on Venezuela's full oil sector recovery remain significant - Rice University's Baker Institute projects best-case output of only 1.2 million bbl/d by end-2026, with recovery to the historical peak of 3.5 million bbl/d requiring years of sustained rule-of-law improvement and foreign investment.
The Iran/Hormuz Shock: Latin America's Geopolitical WindfallOn February 28, 2026, U.S. and Israeli airstrikes targeted Iranian military infrastructure in Operation Epic Fury, triggering the closure of the Strait of Hormuz on March 4, 2026 - the route for approximately 20% of global oil supply and 15–20% of global LNG. The International Energy Agency described it as "the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market," according to a Wikipedia summary of the conflict's economic impact. Brent crude moved from $72.48/bbl on February 27 to $103/bbl on average through March, and peaked near $128/bbl on April 2, 2026, per EIA data. The EIA revised its full-year 2026 Brent forecast to $96/bbl on April 7, up from $78.84 previously. A two-week ceasefire announced by the Trump administration in April briefly reopened the Strait, causing a sharp price pullback.
Columbia University's Center on Global Energy Policy framed the strategic consequence clearly: Latin America was already the world's primary source of non-OPEC supply growth in 2026; the Iran shock made the region's Atlantic-facing barrels indispensable. The full breakdown by country: Brazil received a mild positive from Petrobras revenues, offset by fertilizer import inflation and R$30 billion ($5.8 billion) in government fuel subsidies. Argentina captured accelerated export revenue at record energy surplus levels. Guyana - with no domestic fossil fuel consumption to subsidize - received a pure windfall. Venezuela benefited from an estimated $400 million in additional revenue per $1/bbl price increase. Mexico and Central American nations net-importing refined products absorbed the demand-side pain, with Mexico activating IEPS fuel subsidies to shield domestic consumers. The full guide to the Iran war and Hormuz crisis traces the conflict's full trajectory, and Latin America's gasoline price surge and government responses documents how individual nations managed the consumer-side fallout.
Brazil's Renewable Grid: A World Leader Building at ScaleWhile the oil headlines dominate investor attention, Brazil's electricity grid tells a different story. According to PV Magazine, 84.6% of Brazil's total installed electricity capacity came from renewables as of January 2026, with 87–88% of actual electricity generation from clean sources in 2024–2025. Brazil is the only G20 country on track to meet the COP28 goal of tripling renewable capacity by 2030. Total installed capacity reached 215.9 GW in early 2026, with 9.1 GW of new additions forecast for 2026 alone.
Solar is the fastest-growing technology. Brazil added 2,331 MW of new solar in January–February 2026, reaching approximately 68 GW of total installed photovoltaic capacity - second globally in new solar additions in 2024. Utility-scale additions more than doubled year-on-year as distributed generation fell 37%, reflecting a structural shift toward larger centralized projects. Wind capacity stood at approximately 29.6 GW onshore by end-2025, with wind generating 107.7 TWh in 2024 (a 12.4% annual gain). The offshore wind sector remains pre-commercial but carries extraordinary potential: IBAMA is reviewing 104 projects with combined capacity exceeding 247 GW, against a World Bank technical potential estimate of 1,200 GW.
The Contradiction: Renewables Leader and Fossil Fuel ExpanderBrazil hosting COP30 while simultaneously approving new deepwater oil frontiers and Amazon gas block tenders encapsulates the dual-track dilemma facing Latin America's largest economy. DNV's Energy Transition Outlook for Latin America describes the region's fundamental paradox: the highest renewable electricity penetration of any global region (60–70%+ from clean sources), yet the highest oil share in primary energy supply (40%), with fossil fuels meeting 91% of transport energy needs. Oil demand in transport will not peak until 2050 on current trajectories, per S&P Global's regional forecast. The tension is not merely rhetorical - it shapes billions in investment decisions, bilateral climate negotiations, and the terms on which external capital enters the region.
Oil Price Outlook and What It Means for LatAm Fiscal PositionsBefore February 28, 2026, major institutions were broadly bearish on oil: the EIA projected Brent averaging around $73/bbl for the year; J.P. Morgan held a sub-$60 view based on expected supply surpluses. The Iran war invalidated those frameworks. Post-crisis revised consensus from April 2026 shows the EIA at $96/bbl for full-year 2026 (up from $78.84), Goldman Sachs at $85/bbl (raised $8 from its prior forecast), HSBC at $80/bbl, and ANZ projecting prices above $90 through mid-year before easing, per Reuters analyst surveys. Goldman Sachs noted that if the Hormuz disruption proves structural rather than temporary, Brent could remain above $100 for years, according to Reuters.
For Latin American fiscal balances, the divergence is sharp. Net exporters - Brazil, Argentina, Guyana, Venezuela, Colombia - benefit on current accounts, royalty collections, and state company earnings. Net importers - Mexico on refined products, most of Central America, and the Caribbean - face subsidy pressure and inflationary pass-through. Mexico's position is particularly complex: it earns export revenue on crude but must import significant volumes of refined petroleum products, activating IEPS subsidy mechanisms that can offset crude export windfalls. The sustained high-price environment also strengthens the investment case for every capital commitment in Vaca Muerta and Guyana that was originally modeled at $60–75/bbl break-even costs.
Related Coverage on Rio Times Online-
Petrobras Bets on Sergipe Deepwater to Secure Brazil's Fertilizer Supply
Vaca Muerta RIGI Filings: Inside Argentina's $18 Billion Oil Rush
Mexico's Pemex $425 Billion Investment Plan for 2026: What It Means
Latin America's Gasoline Price Surge: How Governments Are Responding
The Iran War and Hormuz Crisis 2026: A Complete Guide
Venezuela's Democracy Stalls: U.S. Ties, Oil Repression, and What Comes Next
Petrobras Board Chair: What Guilherme Mello's Nomination Signals
Colombia's Ecopetrol Board Deadlock: The Roa Crisis and What It Means for Energy
Petrobras Pre-Salt Discovery at Marlim Sul: A New Deepwater Frontier
Pemex-Petrobras Deepwater Alliance: Could Mexico and Brazil Transform the Gulf?
This article is part of The Rio Times' guide series, offering in-depth analysis for investors, expats, and analysts tracking Latin America. This article does not constitute investment advice.
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