U.S. to Purchase Oil Through 2025 After Massive 2022 Drawdown
(Reuters) — The U.S. is slowly replenishing the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, planning to buy back millions of barrels of oil for delivery in the first several months of next year, after the largest ever sale from the stockpile in 2022.
The Energy Department said on Thursday it had purchased 1.5 million barrels for January delivery to Bayou Choctaw, an SPR site in Louisiana.
The department said earlier this week it aims to buy 2 million barrels a month of domestically produced sour crude, or oil with relatively high sulfur content, for delivery January to March 2025. That oil is to be stored at the SPR's Bryan Mound site in Texas which has recently completed maintenance work.
The Strategic Petroleum Reserve is the world's largest emergency oil stash. Then-President Gerald Ford created the SPR in 1975 after the Arab oil embargo spiked gasoline prices and damaged the economy. Presidents have tapped the stockpile to calm oil markets during war involving oil producing countries 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.
In 2022, the administration of President Joe Biden announced a sale of 180 million barrels of oil over six months, the largest ever SPR sale, in an attempt to lower gasoline prices after Russia invaded Ukraine. The Department of Energy also conducted a sale of 38 million barrels in 2022 that had been mandated by Congress.
The administration says it sold the 180 million barrels at an average of about $95 a barrel. It wants to buy back oil at $79.99 or less. Prices of the U.S. oil benchmark West Texas Intermediate were about $78.15 a barrel CLc1 on Thursday and prices for WTI futures contracts in the first three months of next year were about $74. Conflict in the Middle East could quickly boost oil prices and put the buyback plans in doubt, however. In April, the U.S. canceled an SPR purchase of oil due to rising prices.
The administration has so far bought nearly 45 million barrels of domestic oil since the historic 2022 sale at an average price of $77, it says. The DOE says it has also sped up the return of about 5 million barrels to the SPR from loans to oil companies.
Buybacks of much larger volumes could also risk pushing up oil and gasoline prices ahead of the Nov. 5 presidential election. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm has said the U.S. was being careful not to do anything to remove supply from the market at times when prices are high.
Current SPR Level
The reserve currently holds 376.5 million barrels, nearly 62% of which is sour crude, or oil that many U.S. refineries are engineered to process. The most it ever held was nearly 727 million barrels in 2009.
The sales in 2022 sank the SPR to the lowest level in about 40 years. 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 canceling congressionally mandated sales of 140 million barrels of SPR oil through 2027. Both Democratic and Republican lawmakers had voted for those sales to pay for government programs.
The U.S., which is producing oil at record volumes, has more crude in the SPR than required as a member of the Paris-based International Energy Agency, the West's energy watchdog. The U.S. is required to hold 90 days' worth of net petroleum imports, and the SPR currently has about 155 days’ worth of those imports, according to Mason Hamilton of the American Petroleum Institute.
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