That equates to only 12 Mb at $70. Looks like they spend the money collected when the sold 290 Mb on roads, medicatoin and deficit spending ect.
Welcome to our guide to the energy and commodities powering the global economy. Today, reporter Ari Natter looks at the Biden administration’s struggle to refill the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve. To get this newsletter sent straight to your inbox, you can sign up here.
With oil bumping along near $70 a barrel, this should be the perfect time for the US to refill its depleted emergency stockpile.
The administration of President Joe Biden sold off a record amount of crude from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve over a six-month stretch in 2022, when the average price was $95 per barrel. Replacing supplies at current prices would be a nice deal.
The problem is the government’s crude-procurement fund doesn’t have enough cash to pull it off.
The Energy Department account to buy oil for stockpiling is down to about $841 million, according to an estimate by the consulting firm ClearView Energy Partners. It would stretch to about 12 million barrels at today’s prices.
That would be a mere fraction of the 320-million-barrel shortfall between the current amount stockpiled and the SPR’s maximum capacity of more than 700 million barrels.
The reserve’s level has been at or close to a four-decade low since the Biden administration sold 180 million barrels into the global market in an attempt to bring down gasoline prices following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
The Energy Department didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Officials are slowly refilling the reserve, saying it’s crucial to the nation’s energy security. That includes buying about 50 million barrels of oil and securing the return of 5 million barrels loaned to oil companies. The administration has also asked lawmakers to cancel upcoming congressionally-mandated sales to keep levels from slipping further.