WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The administration of President Joe Biden is slowly putting oil back into the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, after selling a record amount from the emergency stockpile in 2022.
Here are some facts about the SPR and U.S. efforts to replenish it.
WHAT IS THE SPR?
It is the world’s largest emergency oil stash. The United States created the SPR in 1975 after the Arab oil embargo spiked gasoline prices and damaged the U.S. economy. Presidents have tapped the stockpile to calm oil markets during war or when hurricanes hit oil infrastructure along the U.S. Gulf of Mexico. The oil is held in heavily-guarded underground caverns at four sites on the Texas and Louisiana coasts.
HOW MUCH SPR OIL WAS SOLD IN 2022?
In 2022, the administration announced a sale of 180 million barrels over six months from the reserve, the largest ever SPR sale, in an effort to control fuel prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The Energy Department also conducted a sale of 38 million barrels in 2022 that had been mandated in laws passed by Congress.
HOW MUCH IS COMING BACK?
The administration has bought back 13.82 million barrels, of domestically produced, sour, or relatively high sulfur oil that many U.S. refineries are engineered to distill into fuels.
It also has sped up by several months the return of nearly 4 million barrels to the SPR from loans to oil companies. The oil is expected to be returned by February instead of mid-year.
The pace of the buybacks is being tempered by planned life extension maintenance at two of the four SPR sites, department officials have said.
Quick buybacks of much larger volumes could also risk pushing up oil and gasoline prices ahead of the presidential election in November, analysts have said.
HOW MUCH OIL DOES THE SPR HAVE NOW?
The reserve currently holds 354.4 million barrels, nearly 60% of which is sour crude. The most oil it has ever held was nearly 727 million barrels in 2009.
The sales in 2022 sank the level of the SPR to the lowest in about 40 years, and even with the buybacks, the level is clinging to its lowest since late 1983.
That angered some Republicans who accused the Democratic administration of leaving the U.S. with a thin supply buffer to respond to a future crisis.
The administration says it has a three-pronged strategy to return oil to the reserve. That includes buying back oil, the return of oil loaned from the SPR to companies, and its work with Congress to cancel congressionally mandated sales of 140 million barrels of SPR oil through 2027 that both Democratic and Republican lawmakers had voted for in previous laws.
The U.S., which is producing oil at record volumes with more increases expected this year, also has more crude in the SPR than it is required to as a member of the Paris-based International Energy Agency, the West’s energy watchdog. Under the agreement, the U.S. is required to hold 90 days’ worth of net petroleum imports.
AT WHAT PRICE DOES THE U.S. WANT TO BUY OIL BACK?
The administration says it sold the 180 million barrels at an average of about $95 a barrel. It wants to buy back oil at $79 a barrel or less. The current West Texas Intermediate oil price of about $72 a barrel allows such purchases. But prices could go back up given the risk of the war in Gaza expanding to the greater Middle East, or effects from the conflict in Ukraine.
DOES THE ADMINISTRATION HAVE MONEY TO BUY MORE?
The Energy Department has about $3.67 billion left in its SPR buyback fund, enough to purchase about 46.5 million barrels at the $79 a barrel price, according to ClearView Energy Partners, a nonpartisan research group.
The department says it will release monthly plans to buy back oil in increments through at least May.
The last bid of up to 3 million barrels for April delivery was released on Jan. 3.
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