US Could Start Buying Oil for Reserve After June Sale, Energy Secretary Says
(Reuters) — U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm told lawmakers on Thursday her department could start repurchasing oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) after completing a congressionally mandated sale next month.
"That congressionally mandated sale of 26 million barrels will be completed by June, and it's at that point where we will flip the switch and then seek to purchase," Granholm told lawmakers in a hearing in the U.S. House of Representatives.
The Biden administration last year conducted the largest ever sale from the SPR of 180 million barrels. That and other sales last year pushed the level of the reserve to about 372 million barrels, the lowest since 1983.
Granholm previously said the Energy Department could start buying back in the fourth quarter after maintenance on two of the reserve's four sites on the coasts of Texas and Louisiana.
The administration has said it will buy oil when prices are consistently at or below $67 to $72 per barrel. U.S. crude prices fell more than 2% on Thursday to settle at $70.87 a barrel.
Granholm's comments "reflect an intense messaging campaign likely intended to mollify Republicans angry about the big SPR draws," said Bob McNally an energy policy analyst at Rapidan Energy. Granholm's comments also likely seek to dissuade OPEC+, an oil production group including Saudi Arabia and Russia, from cutting supply again, he said.
OPEC+ last cut output in April, a surprise move of about 1.15 million barrels per day, that the United States called inadvisable.
Related News
Related News
- Keystone Oil Pipeline Resumes Operations After Temporary Shutdown
- Freeport LNG Plant Runs Near Zero Consumption for Fifth Day
- Biden Administration Buys Oil for Emergency Reserve Above Target Price
- Mexico Seizes Air Liquide's Hydrogen Plant at Pemex Refinery
- Enbridge to Invest $500 Million in Pipeline Assets, Including Expansion of 850-Mile Gray Oak Pipeline
Comments