Saskatoon StarPhoenix

U.S. set to release 11M barrels of oil as Iran sanctions begin

- STEPHEN CUNNINGHAM

The U.S. plans to release 11 million barrels of oil from its 660-millionbar­rel emergency stockpile, just as American sanctions on Iranian oil exports kick in.

The sour, high-sulphur crude will hit the market in October and November, according to a notice of sale from the Energy Department.

That timing may reflect the White House’s concern over a tight oil market amid the renewal of U.S. sanctions on Iran, according to analysts at Clearview Energy Partners LLC. The Trump administra­tion has asked allies to halt all imports of Iranian oil by Nov. 4, stoking global supply fears. Analysts have also speculated about whether President Donald Trump will announce an emergency release from the crude stockpile to lower U.S. pump prices in the run-up to November’s midterm elections.

Yet an 11-million-barrel sale over two months likely won’t do much to offset the impact of sanctions, which the administra­tion estimates will remove 700,000 to 1 million barrels a day of Iranian crude from the global market by early November.

The October sale is part of a regular draw-down schedule to raise money for government programs. The Energy Department will draw crude from three sites that are part of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve: Bryan Mound and Big Hill in Texas, and West Hackberry in Louisiana.

Any further action by the president, who can release up to 30 million barrels in an emergency, is unlikely before the Nov. 4 deadline, Clearview said.

Trump has proposed the sale of half of the stockpile — which currently totals 660 million barrels — to cut the budget deficit. Congress has so far authorized the sale of around 240 million barrels between 2017 and 2027.

Bloomberg

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