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NFL Week 18 playoff picture: Clinching scenarios, standings

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Two more NFL teams officially made the postseason during Week 17 of the 2025 NFL regular season, and three division titles were clinched.

On Christmas Day, a loss for the Lions meant the Packers clinched a playoff spot. But Green Bay’s loss to the Ravens on Saturday night allowed the Bears to secure the NFC North title. On Saturday afternoon, the Texans made the playoffs with a win over the Chargers, which also helped the Broncos clinch the AFC West title. And finally, the Patriots won the AFC East title after the Bills lost to the Eagles on Sunday.

So what’s at stake in the final week of the regular season? There are two spots left in the playoffs (one in each conference), neither No. 1 seed has been clinched and four division titles are still up for grabs. Let’s take a look at how those spots can be claimed.

More NFL playoff race coverage:
Projecting the final seeding
FPI ratings for every team

Week 18 playoff-clinching scenarios in the AFC

The matchup: vs. L.A. Chargers on Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET, CBS

How the Broncos can clinch the No. 1 seed and home-field advantage in the AFC:


The matchup: vs. Indianapolis on Sunday, 1 p.m. ET, CBS

How the Texans can clinch the AFC South:


The matchup: vs. Tennessee on Sunday, 1 p.m. ET, Fox

How the Jaguars can clinch the No. 1 seed and home-field advantage in the AFC:

How the Jaguars can clinch the AFC South:


The matchup: vs. Miami on Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET, Fox

How the Patriots can clinch the No. 1 seed and home-field advantage in the AFC:


The matchup: vs. Baltimore on Sunday, 8:20 p.m. ET, NBC/Peacock

How the Steelers can clinch the AFC North and make the playoffs:

play

2:31

Cam Newton: John Harbaugh, Mike Tomlin are victims of their own success

Dan Orlovsky and Cam Newton discuss what’s at stake for John Harbaugh and Mike Tomlin ahead of the pivotal Week 18 matchup between the Ravens and Steelers.


The matchup: at Pittsburgh on Sunday, 8:20 p.m. ET, NBC/Peacock

How the Ravens can clinch the AFC North and make the playoffs:

Week 18 playoff-clinching scenarios in the NFC

The matchup: at Tampa Bay on Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN

How the Panthers can clinch the NFC South and make the playoffs:


The matchup: vs. Seattle on Saturday, 8 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN

How the 49ers can clinch the NFC West, No. 1 seed and home-field advantage in the NFC:

play

1:49

Orlovsky: Kyle Shanahan is Coach of the Year

Adam Schefter and Dan Orlovsky praise Kyle Shanahan and the 49ers for their resilience in the face of injuries this season.


The matchup: at San Francisco on Saturday, 8 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN

How the Seahawks can clinch the NFC West, No. 1 seed and home-field advantage in the NFC:


The matchup: vs. Carolina on Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN

How the Bucs can clinch the NFC South and make the playoffs:

NFL playoff matchups as things stand

AFC


NFC



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New Mexico congressional delegation reacts to Venezuela strike

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New Mexico’s congressional delegation is reacting to the news of the strike in Venezuela along with the capture of the country’s president, Nicolás Maduro and flew him out of the country. Representative Melanie Stansbury reacted to the news in a social media post.Representative Gabe Vazquez from New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District also reacting via social media.Representative Teresa Leger Fernandez is calling for accountability. Senator Martin Heinrich says the operation happened “without any authorization.”

New Mexico’s congressional delegation is reacting to the news of the strike in Venezuela along with the capture of the country’s president, Nicolás Maduro and flew him out of the country.

Representative Melanie Stansbury reacted to the news in a social media post.

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Representative Gabe Vazquez from New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District also reacting via social media.

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Representative Teresa Leger Fernandez is calling for accountability.

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You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

Senator Martin Heinrich says the operation happened “without any authorization.”

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You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.





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Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado releases letter after Maduro’s capture. Read the full text.

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María Corina Machado released a letter addressing the Venezuelan people after leader Nicolás Maduro and his wife were captured in a U.S. operation overnight Saturday. 

Machado, an opposition leader who has mostly been in hiding over the last year, said Maduro will “face international justice for the atrocious crimes committed against Venezuelans and against citizens of many other nations.” 

“The time for freedom has come!” Machado, who was awarded the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize, wrote in the letter posted on X.

It was not clear on Saturday if Machado, who escaped to Norway in a secret mission last month, was in Venezuela. She told CBS News in mid-December that she was “absolutely” supportive of President Trump’s increasing military pressure on the Maduro regime and said she would welcome “more and more pressure so that Maduro understands that he has to go.”

Read the full text of her letter, translated by CBS News, below. 

María Corina Machado’s letter to Venezuelans 

Venezuelans, The time for freedom has come!

Nicolás Maduro from today will face international justice for the atrocious crimes committed against Venezuelans and against citizens of many other nations. Given his refusal to accept a negotiated solution, the United States government has fulfilled its promise to enforce the law.

The time has come for popular sovereignty and national sovereignty to prevail in our country. We are going to restore order, release the political prisoners, build an exceptional country, and bring our children back home.

We have fought for years, we have given it our all, and it has been worth it. What was meant to happen is happening.

This is the hour of the citizens. Those of us who risked everything for democracy on June 28th. Those of us who elected Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia as the legitimate President of Venezuela, who must immediately assume his constitutional mandate and be recognized as Commander-in-Chief of the National Armed Forces by all the officers and soldiers who comprise it.

Today we are ready to assert our mandate and take power. Let us remain vigilant, active, and organized until the democratic transition is complete. A transition that needs ALL of us.

To the Venezuelans who are currently in our country, be ready to put into action what we will be communicating to you very soon through our official channels.

To Venezuelans abroad, we need you to be mobilized, engaging the governments and citizens of the world and committing them from now on to the great operation of building the new Venezuela.

In these crucial hours, receive all my strength, my confidence, and my affection. We remain vigilant and in contact.

VENEZUELA WILL BE FREE! We go hand in hand with God, until the end.



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Buccaneers have had an incredible fall off; is Baker Mayfield’s reckless play to blame?

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It wasn’t supposed to be like this for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Over the first six weeks of the season, the Buccaneers were at the top of the NFC South and quarterback Baker Mayfield was in MVP discussions as he kept the Bucs offense afloat while All-Pro left tackle Tristan Wirfs, running back Bucky Irving and wide receivers Mike Evans and Chris Godwin all missed time with injury. They were eighth in points per drive, seventh in EPA per play and sitting at 5-1 with a win over the Seattle Seahawks in Seattle.

However, since Week 7, the Bucs have fallen off a cliff, and now find themselves needing a win on Saturday against the Panthers and some help if they want to win the division for the fifth straight year. Over this same time span, the Bucs are 26th in EPA per play on offense, 25th in points per drive and have lost eight of their last 10 games, including a “Thursday Night Football” loss to the Atlanta Falcons that made Todd Bowles give an expletive-laden statement about the team postgame, and recently a baffling loss to the moribund Miami Dolphins.  

So how did this team go from early Super Bowl contenders to potentially out of the playoffs completely? It comes down to a bad mixture of problems on offense.

On the offensive side of the ball, it’s easy to point to the various injuries as why the Bucs offense has fallen apart, and you would be correct to an extent. Mayfield is playing through a shoulder injury, Wirfs has been in and out of the lineup, Evans was on IR from weeks 8-15 and Irving is just now getting close to 100% after shoulder and foot injuries during the season. However, I think all of the injuries have papered over a larger issue with the offense lately: it feels like there’s no trust between anyone on that side of the ball. The offensive coordinator doesn’t trust his offensive line or QB, the QB doesn’t trust the line or his playcaller, receivers aren’t running the right routes. It’s all been bad for Tampa Bay and that lack of trust has been evident on tape. 

Let’s start with the QB and passing game. Yes, Mayfield has been hurt, but it doesn’t help that he’s playing entirely too wound up. Mayfield is playing amped up because of the idea of pressure and getting hit, and it’s causing mistakes. Take one of his interceptions he threw against Miami, for example. The Dolphins are running a non-traditional Tampa 2 coverage, and the Bucs have the perfect play to beat it, with wide receiver Jalen McMillan coming over the top on a big post. Mayfield throws a pick despite making the correct decision to throw because he bails on a clean pocket and throws off the timing. Because this pass is late, it allows cornerback Jason Marshall Jr to make a play on the ball.

On this play, Mayfield ends up scrambling for a first down, but the throw is there for Evans as the over the ball route on mesh. Mayfield sees it, but opts for a scramble instead. While it’s a good result, it’s a bad process and makes you worry about the 2025 version of this Bucs offense.

Mayfield’s accuracy has also taken a stark dip post-Week 7, hampering the passing game even more. From weeks 1-7, Mayfield’s on-target rate was 73.7%, not a super high number but still one that would qualify for a starting QB in the NFL. Since then, that number has dropped to 69.3%, which is incredibly concerning and also shows up on the tape. 

Where completion percentage is sort of overused when it comes to QB stats, on-target rate measures how often the pass hits the receiver in stride, regardless of whether the pass is broken up or not. While Mayfield has also not been incredibly accurate, the entire offense has also entered the tank. On top of some odd timing and design on play calls by offensive coordinator Josh Grizzard, the receiver corps has also just been bad. 

This is the exact same play that Mayfield missed Evans on, a mesh concept where Evans is the over the ball route. However, the linebacker causes a collision with Godwin, and Emeka Egbuka also collides with the linebacker. So you end up with three receivers in one area, stacked on top of each other like LEGOs. Not exactly how you draw it up.

Tampa’s offensive woes this season go beyond just not being healthy. Yes, Mayfield has dealt with a litany of injuries, but he also can’t continue to play this way for the offense to be at its best. Mayfield is reckless, that’s part of what makes him such fun to watch. However, he chooses too often to put his body on the line and sacrifices potential big gains through the air to put his already injured body through a whole lot more pain. Admirable, but also far too reckless for a Bucs team that has more than just playoff aspirations.

The biggest thing Grizzard can do for Mayfield is telling him to chill out, honestly. Giving him more easy looks in the passing game that accentuate his strengths as a passer (strong arm to throw outside the hashes, growing as a passer in the middle of the field) and allowing for the offensive skill-position players to help him out now that they’re healthy and in the lineup together. 

Part of that is leaning on the run game, and that comes with its own set of problems. Without most of the aces on the offensive line in the lineup, Tampa can’t push around teams like it did last season, but the intentionality in design behind the run game has been lacking this season. With former OC Liam Coen out the door, the run game hasn’t popped as much, forcing the offense into some rough situations. Grizzard could use Irving and Sean Tucker in space more often, where their vision might be better this season.

Time is running out for the Bucs to find an answer, with their season on the line against the Panthers on Saturday. If Tampa Bay winds up on the outside looking in come playoff time, its offense will be asking what could’ve been.





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NMDOT releases names for public to vote on for Name a Snow Plow contest

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NEW MEXICO (KRQE) – The submission period is over, and now it’s time to pick this year’s winners for the New Mexico Department of Transportation’s Name a Snow Plow contest. The department narrowed down the entries to 50 creative and fun names: Once voting is wrapped up, the top 12 names will be announced and assigned […]



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Conservationists in Kenya pay tribute to beloved ‘super tusker’ elephant Craig

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NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenyans are mourning the death of a beloved “super tusker” elephant whose long life in the wild came to symbolize the country’s increasingly successful efforts to protect the mammals from ivory poachers.

The bull elephant who died on Saturday was named Craig. He lived in Amboseli National Park, a protected area in southern Kenya that is a favorite of safari tourists, the Kenya Wildlife Service said in a statement.

“Craig, the legendary super tusker famed for its immense, ground-sweeping tusks and calm, dignified presence, passed on at the age of 54,” the statement said.

The Amboseli Trust for Elephants said Craig had died of natural causes. The conservation group said it was grateful to everyone who worked to help the animal “live out his life naturally.”

Local broadcaster NTV aired a segment on the death of Craig, saying of the elephant that it was a rare creature as “one of the last remaining elephants identified as super tuskers in Africa.”

The term describes a bull elephant with tusks that weigh over 45 kilograms each. Tusks that size are so long that they scrape the ground as the elephant walks, according to the Tsavo Trust, a non-profit conservation group in Kenya. Females that grow long tusks are called iconic cows, the group says.

In Amboseli National Park, a protected area whose vegetation ranges from savannah woodland to open grasslands near the Tanzania border, Craig stood out as an attraction to tourists and a notable creature to conservationists working to protect elephants from poachers and other threats.

The elephant was said to be calm, “often pausing patiently as visitors photographed and filmed him,” the statement by Kenya Wildlife Service said.

In 2021, Craig was adopted by beer maker East African Breweries through its popular Tusker brand, reflecting his prominence but also underscoring collaboration between conservation groups and others in Kenya.

Kenya’s national parks and reserves are home to a variety of wildlife species and attract millions of visitors annually, making the country a tourism hotspot.

The elephant population has grown from 36,280 in 2021 to 42,072 in 2025, the latest official figures show.

In the Mwea National Reserve, a protected area east of the Kenyan capital of Nairobi, the elephant population grew spectacularly, overwhelming the ecosystem and requiring the relocation of about 100 elephants in 2024.

The African savanna elephant is the largest land animal. Adult males weigh about six tons. Craig “fathered a number of calves, ensuring that his powerful bloodline and gentle character live on across generations,” the wildlife service said.

___ Muhumuza reported from Kampala, Uganda.



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GEEZER BUTLER Says A.I. Is Helping Him Finish New Solo Music

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Legendary Black Sabbath bassist Geezer Butler has revealed that he has a significant amount of unreleased solo material — and modern technology is helping him finally bring it to life.

During a question-and-answer session at the 2025 Steel City Con, Butler was asked whether he still has any solo albums “in the tank.” His response made it clear that retirement from writing music is far from his mind. Which also appears to be the case for Butler‘s Black Sabbath bandmate, Tony Iommi.

“Oh, gosh. I’ve got tons of stuff,” Butler said. “Since we finished the last Sabbath show [at Back To The Beginning in July 2025], I’ve just been going through all the stuff that I’ve written since the ’80s onwards and updating everything.”

One of the biggest obstacles Butler previously faced was the lack of a vocalist during the writing process. That, he explained, has changed with the emergence of artificial intelligence.

“What held me back before, I didn’t have a singer when I’m at home, but A.I. came along,” he said with a laugh. “So all my songs now, I’ve updated them all and I’m using an A.I. singer to bring all the lyrics out.”

Butler clarified that the technology isn’t replacing human musicians, but rather helping him communicate his ideas more clearly. By using A.I.-generated vocals, he can now present fully realized song concepts to singers he plans to collaborate with.

“So now I can take it to singers that I’m gonna be working with and go, ‘This is what I want on the album,'” he explained. “Before I was just playing them a bass riff or something and going, ‘Can you sing to this?’… It’s so much better now, ’cause you can sit in your studio and do everything on A.I. and then take it to proper musicians and let them take over.”

Butler acknowledged that some fans view the use of A.I. as controversial. “A lot of people think it’s cheating,” he said, though he emphasized that it has been a creative tool rather than a shortcut.

During the session, Butler also reflected on Black Sabbath‘s classic songwriting process, highlighting how organic and collaborative it was.

“With Sabbath, we’d sit down in a room together and just jam and jam and jam until somebody came up with something that we could work with,” he said. “Once we had a good riff, we’d finish the music part of it. Ozzy would sing his vocal line, then I’d write the lyrics.”

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Jake Paul drops out of WBA cruiserweight rankings after loss

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PANAMA CITY — Jake Paul has slipped out of the WBA cruiserweight rankings after the YouTuber-turned-boxer was soundly beaten by former world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua last month.

Paul’s jaw was broken in two places, and the American needed surgery to repair the damage after Joshua’s sixth-round knockout victory in a heavyweight bout in Miami.

Paul (12-2, 7 KOs) had entered the WBA’s cruiserweight rankings at No. 14 in July shortly after he beat 39-year-old Julio César Chávez Jr. by unanimous decision in Anaheim, California.

He was at No. 15 entering the bout against Joshua.



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What the US strike in Venezuela means for gas prices and the largest proven oil reserve on the planet

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Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has been captured and flown out of the country following a large-scale U.S. strike on Caracas, leaving behind uncertainty for the country — and its massive oil reserves.The Trump administration just struck a country with more oil than Iraq. Venezuela is sitting on a massive 303 billion barrels worth of crude — about a fifth of the world’s global reserves, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. That trove of crude will play a central role in the country’s future.Oil futures don’t trade on the weekend, so the near-term impact on the price of oil is a bit of a guessing game and quite dependent on how the next couple of days shake out. Maduro’s socialist government has been unfriendly to the global oil industry and allowed its infrastructure to crumble. It’s unclear in the immediate aftermath of the strike what the political future of Venezuela holds — and whether the next government will keep a tight grip on its dilapidated oil industry or unlock its potential with a friendlier stance to the international market.“For oil, this has the potential for a historic event,” said Phil Flynn, senior market analyst at the Price Futures Group. “The Maduro regime and Hugo Chavez basically ransacked the Venezuelan oil industry.”Related Video Above: Caracas wakes up to Venezuela without MaduroU.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the U.S. action in Venezuela has ended after Maduro was captured. Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez is a member of the socialist regime that took control of the country in 1999, and if she assumes power, little may change in the near term.But Maduro’s removal opens the possibility of a power vacuum, which could put the future of Venezuelan politics in doubt. The United States recognizes the exiled Edmundo Gonzalez as the rightful president of Venezuela, supported by 2025 Nobel Peace Prize recipient María Corina Machado.“The next 24 to 48 hours will be huge,” Flynn said. “If we see signs that the Venezuelan military supports the opposition, that’ll be a big win for global markets. On the flipside, if there’s a sense this will lead to further conflict or a civil war in Venezuela, we’ll get the opposite reaction.”Control of Venezuela’s oil troveVenezuela is home to the largest proven oil reserve on Earth, but its potential far outweighs its actual output: Venezuela produces only about 1 million barrels of oil per day — about 0.8% of global crude production.That’s less than half of what it produced before Maduro took control of the country in 2013 and less than a third of the 3.5 million barrels it was pumping before the Socialist regime took over.International sanctions on the Venezuelan government and a deep economic crisis contributed to the decline of the country’s oil industry — but so did a lack of investment and maintenance, according to the EIA. Venezuela’s energy infrastructure is deteriorating, and its capacity to produce oil has been greatly diminished over the years.That’s why, even if Venezuela’s oil supply is completely cut off from the rest of the world in the aftermath of the U.S. strikes, oil prices — and their derivatives like gasoline — probably won’t surge out of control. The country just doesn’t produce enough oil to make that big a difference.Oil prices have been in check this year because of oversupply fears. OPEC has ramped up production, but demand has fallen off a bit as the global economy continues to struggle with inflation and affordability after the post-pandemic price shock.U.S. oil briefly rose above $60 a barrel when the Trump administration began seizing oil from Venezuelan vessels, but it has since fallen to $57 a barrel again. So the market’s reaction — if investors believe the strike is bad news for oil supply — will almost certainly be muted.“Psychologically it might give it a bit of a boost, but Venezuela has oil that can be easily replaced by a combination of global producers,” Flynn said.Venezuela’s oil potentialThe kind of oil Venezuela is sitting on — heavy, sour crude — requires special equipment and a high level of technical prowess to produce. International oil companies have the capability to extract and refine it, but they’ve been restricted from doing business in the country.The United States, the world’s largest oil producer, has light, sweet crude, which is good for making gasoline but not much else. Heavy, sour crude like the oil from Venezuela is crucial for certain products made in the refining process, including diesel, asphalt and fuels for factories and other heavy equipment. Diesel is in tight supply around the world — in large part because of sanctions on Venezuelan oil.Unlocking Venezuelan oil could be particularly beneficial to the United States: Venezuela is nearby and its oil is relatively cheap — a result of its sticky, sludgy texture that requires significant refining. Most U.S. refineries were constructed to process Venezuela’s heavy oil, and they’re significantly more efficient when they’re using Venezuelan oil compared to American oil, according to Flynn.“If indeed this continues to go smoothly — and it looks like a masterful operation so far — and U.S. companies are allowed to go back and rebuild the Venezuelan oil industry, it could be a game-changer for the global oil market,” Flynn said.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has been captured and flown out of the country following a large-scale U.S. strike on Caracas, leaving behind uncertainty for the country — and its massive oil reserves.

The Trump administration just struck a country with more oil than Iraq. Venezuela is sitting on a massive 303 billion barrels worth of crude — about a fifth of the world’s global reserves, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. That trove of crude will play a central role in the country’s future.

Oil futures don’t trade on the weekend, so the near-term impact on the price of oil is a bit of a guessing game and quite dependent on how the next couple of days shake out. Maduro’s socialist government has been unfriendly to the global oil industry and allowed its infrastructure to crumble.

It’s unclear in the immediate aftermath of the strike what the political future of Venezuela holds — and whether the next government will keep a tight grip on its dilapidated oil industry or unlock its potential with a friendlier stance to the international market.

“For oil, this has the potential for a historic event,” said Phil Flynn, senior market analyst at the Price Futures Group. “The Maduro regime and Hugo Chavez basically ransacked the Venezuelan oil industry.”

Related Video Above: Caracas wakes up to Venezuela without Maduro

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the U.S. action in Venezuela has ended after Maduro was captured. Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez is a member of the socialist regime that took control of the country in 1999, and if she assumes power, little may change in the near term.

But Maduro’s removal opens the possibility of a power vacuum, which could put the future of Venezuelan politics in doubt. The United States recognizes the exiled Edmundo Gonzalez as the rightful president of Venezuela, supported by 2025 Nobel Peace Prize recipient María Corina Machado.

“The next 24 to 48 hours will be huge,” Flynn said. “If we see signs that the Venezuelan military supports the opposition, that’ll be a big win for global markets. On the flipside, if there’s a sense this will lead to further conflict or a civil war in Venezuela, we’ll get the opposite reaction.”

Control of Venezuela’s oil trove

Venezuela is home to the largest proven oil reserve on Earth, but its potential far outweighs its actual output: Venezuela produces only about 1 million barrels of oil per day — about 0.8% of global crude production.

That’s less than half of what it produced before Maduro took control of the country in 2013 and less than a third of the 3.5 million barrels it was pumping before the Socialist regime took over.

International sanctions on the Venezuelan government and a deep economic crisis contributed to the decline of the country’s oil industry — but so did a lack of investment and maintenance, according to the EIA. Venezuela’s energy infrastructure is deteriorating, and its capacity to produce oil has been greatly diminished over the years.

That’s why, even if Venezuela’s oil supply is completely cut off from the rest of the world in the aftermath of the U.S. strikes, oil prices — and their derivatives like gasoline — probably won’t surge out of control. The country just doesn’t produce enough oil to make that big a difference.

Oil prices have been in check this year because of oversupply fears. OPEC has ramped up production, but demand has fallen off a bit as the global economy continues to struggle with inflation and affordability after the post-pandemic price shock.

U.S. oil briefly rose above $60 a barrel when the Trump administration began seizing oil from Venezuelan vessels, but it has since fallen to $57 a barrel again. So the market’s reaction — if investors believe the strike is bad news for oil supply — will almost certainly be muted.

“Psychologically it might give it a bit of a boost, but Venezuela has oil that can be easily replaced by a combination of global producers,” Flynn said.

Venezuela’s oil potential

The kind of oil Venezuela is sitting on — heavy, sour crude — requires special equipment and a high level of technical prowess to produce. International oil companies have the capability to extract and refine it, but they’ve been restricted from doing business in the country.

The United States, the world’s largest oil producer, has light, sweet crude, which is good for making gasoline but not much else. Heavy, sour crude like the oil from Venezuela is crucial for certain products made in the refining process, including diesel, asphalt and fuels for factories and other heavy equipment. Diesel is in tight supply around the world — in large part because of sanctions on Venezuelan oil.

Unlocking Venezuelan oil could be particularly beneficial to the United States: Venezuela is nearby and its oil is relatively cheap — a result of its sticky, sludgy texture that requires significant refining. Most U.S. refineries were constructed to process Venezuela’s heavy oil, and they’re significantly more efficient when they’re using Venezuelan oil compared to American oil, according to Flynn.

“If indeed this continues to go smoothly — and it looks like a masterful operation so far — and U.S. companies are allowed to go back and rebuild the Venezuelan oil industry, it could be a game-changer for the global oil market,” Flynn said.



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What we know about U.S. military involvement in Venezuela strikes

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What we know about U.S. military involvement in Venezuela strikes



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