Albuquerque Journal

Biden weighs tapping oil reserve amid demand

With OPEC unwilling to up output, president looks at release to drop gas prices

- BY ANNMARIE HORDERN

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden acknowledg­ed that OPEC+ countries won’t increase oil output enough to meet U.S. demands and left the door open to a range of options, as the administra­tion weighs whether to tap the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Biden was responding to a question about using the reserve after the oil-producing group, which includes Saudi Arabia, rejected his request for a large production increase and stuck to its plan for gradual monthly output increases of 400,000 barrels a day.

“First of all, I’m not anticipati­ng that OPEC would respond, that Russia and/or Saudi Arabia would respond,” Biden told reporters at the White House on Saturday. “They’re going to pump some more oil. Whether they pump enough oil is a different thing.”

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said Friday that Biden “is looking at” a potential release from the petroleum reserve to bring down gasoline prices. “The SPR is certainly on the table as an option,” she said in a Bloomberg Television interview.

Biden avoided a direct answer on Saturday and suggested that internatio­nal discussion­s on the matter are continuing.

“There are other tools in the arsenal that we have to deal and I’m dealing with other countries,” he said. “At an appropriat­e time I will talk about it, that we can get more energy in the pipeline figurative­ly and literally speaking.”

Biden is facing pressure to stem rising energy prices as the recovery from the pandemic has sent oil and gasoline prices higher. The national average price for a gallon of regular unleaded stood at $3.42 as of Thursday, the highest since 2014, according to auto club AAA.

While rising prices at the pump pose a political risk to any U.S. president, Biden has added reason to worry as high energy costs and rising inflation threaten his efforts to pull the economy out of its COVID-19 shock and enact his agenda of social spending and higher taxes on the well-off.

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