{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/68f00b3ace402940bcbac06a/6961402679fe7d5545588ae9?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"COMPLIMENTARY FULL EPISODE - MBP Ep 13: Intelligence Briefing – Venezuela, Hemispheric Dominance, and What It Means for Canada with Rory Johnston","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/68f00b3ace402940bcbac06a/1769727359597-11f8a4b6-1455-412f-b2ff-8c5a931e640a.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>In this first of 2026 episode, Ben Woodfinden, Tyler Meredith, and Shannon Phillips are joined by Rory Johnston of Commodity Context, University of Toronto’s Munk School, and host of <em>The Oil Ground Up</em> Podcast to unpack the shock U.S. operation in Venezuela and the ripple effects for Canada.</p><p>The conversation focuses on the Canadian angle: what this episode signals about U.S. strategy and instability risk, how Venezuelan heavy crude could affect Western Canadian Select pricing, what it means for TMX and Asia-bound exports, and why the case for additional Canadian egress and demand diversification is strengthening.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>In this episode, they discuss:</strong></p><p>• What the U.S. operation in Venezuela signals about American “hemispheric dominance,” and the destabilization risks if there is no credible post-operation plan</p><p>• The split between strategic rhetoric and resource mercantilism, and why “regime change” framing may not match reality on the ground</p><p>• How sanctions, blockades, and forced trade flows could reshape heavy crude dynamics and WCS differentia</p><p>• What the Venezuela shock could mean for TMX utilization, China demand, and Canada’s evolving export geography</p><p>• The pipeline policy implications for Canada: westbound egress, energy security, and the federal–provincial bargaining terrain in a weaker price environment</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Takeaways</strong></p><p><br></p><p><strong>On U.S. Strategy, Regime Outcomes, and Instability Risk</strong></p><p>• WOODFINDEN: The execution may have been “clinical,” but the absence of a coherent follow-through plan elevates risks of prolonged instability and spillover effects (including migration and regional disruption)</p><p>• MEREDITH: The intervention is notable for how openly transactional it is—less “democracy promotion,” more direct resource monetization and control over proceeds</p><p>• PHILLIPS: Diaspora expectations and political messaging can diverge sharply from realities on the ground, especially if elections and institutional reform are not central to the plan</p><p><br></p><p><strong>On Venezuela’s Oil Sector and the Limits of a Quick Production Surge</strong></p><p>• JOHNSTON: Venezuela has massive reserves, but above-ground constraints are severe—human capital loss, decayed infrastructure, and unattractive fiscal terms make rapid rehabilitation highly uncertain</p><p>• JOHNSTON: The “low-hanging fruit” is not new production; it is simply allowing blocked barrels to flow—exports can rebound faster than capacity can be rebuilt</p><p>• JOHNSTON: Large-scale restoration is a multi-year, tens-of-billions proposition, and majors will be hesitant absent credible stability, durable rules, and risk-adjusted returns</p><p><br></p><p><strong>On WCS Differentials and Canada’s Competitive Exposure</strong></p><p>• JOHNSTON: If Venezuelan barrels resume flowing primarily to China, the immediate impact on WCS at Houston should be limited; the pressure intensifies if barrels are <em>forced</em> into the U.S. Gulf Coast to compete directly with Canadian heavy</p><p>• JOHNSTON: Market narratives have likely over-shot—Canada has historically competed with Venezuelan heavy; the bigger Canadian vulnerability is policy/egress constraints rather than “existential” competition</p><p>• PHILLIPS: In a softer market, even modest widening in heavy differentials can translate into material public-revenue hits, amplifying fiscal stress in resource-dependent provinces</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Rory Johnston’s Contact Details: </strong></p><p>Twitter:&nbsp;x.com/Rory_Johnston&nbsp;</p><p>Web:&nbsp;www.commoditycontext.com (www.commoditycontext.com/)&nbsp;</p><p>Contributor - Venezuelan Article of Interest: thedispatch.com/newsletter/dispatch-energy/trump-venezuela-oil-maduro/</p>","author_name":"MBP Intelligence "}