Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biden taps oil reserve to cut price at pump Release of 1 million barrels a day for 6 months ordered

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Thursday ordered the release of 1 million barrels of oil per day from the nation’s strategic petroleum reserve for six months, a bid to control energy prices that have spiked after the United States and allies imposed steep sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.

The president said it was not known how much gasoline prices could decline as a result of his move, but he suggested it might be “anything from 10 cents to 35 cents a gallon.” Gasoline is averaging about $4.23 a gallon, compared with $2.87 a year ago, according to AAA.

“The bottom line is if we want lower gas prices we need to have more oil supply right now,” Biden said. “This is a moment of consequenc­e and peril for the world, and pain at the pump for American families.”

The president also wants Congress to impose financial penalties on oil and gas companies that lease public lands but are not producing. He said he will invoke the Defense Production Act to encourage the mining of critical minerals for batteries in electric vehicles, part of a broader push to shift toward cleaner energy sources and reduce the use of fossil fuels.

Reaction from the oil industry and energy experts was muted. The reserve has mostly been used to increase the supply of oil during wars, foreign threats to energy supplies or natural disasters. Smaller releases by the Biden administra­tion from the reserve starting late last year have had little impact on the prices drivers and businesses pay for gasoline,

diesel and other fuels that are made from crude oil.

“It will lower the oil price a little and encourage more demand,” said Scott Sheffield, chief executive officer of Pioneer Natural Resources, a Texas oil company. “But it is still a Band-Aid on a significan­t shortfall of supply.”

The actions show that oil remains a vulnerabil­ity for the U.S. Higher prices have hurt Biden’s approval domestical­ly and added billions of oil-export dollars to the Russian government as it wages war on Ukraine.

Tapping the stockpile would create pressures that could reduce oil prices, though Biden has twice ordered releases from the reserves without causing a meaningful shift in oil markets. Biden said Thursday that he expects gasoline prices could drop “fairly significan­tly.”

Part of Biden’s concern is that high prices have not so far coaxed a meaningful jump in oil production. The planned release is a way to increase supplies as a bridge until oil companies ramp up their own production, with administra­tion officials estimating that domestic production will grow by 1 million barrels daily this year and an additional 700,000 barrels daily in 2023.

The markets reacted quickly with crude oil prices dropping about 6% in Thursday trading to roughly $101 a barrel.

Still, oil is up from roughly $60 a year ago, with supplies failing to keep up with demand as the world economy has begun to rebound from the coronaviru­s pandemic. That inflationa­ry problem was compounded by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, which created new uncertaint­ies about oil and natural gas supplies and led to retaliator­y sanctions from the U.S. and its allies.

Stewart Glickman, an oil analyst for CFRA Research, said the release would bring short-term relief on prices and would be akin to “taking some Advil for a headache.” But markets would ultimately look to see whether, after the releases stop, the underlying problems that led to Biden’s decisions remain.

“The root cause of the headache is probably still going to be there after the medicine wears off,” Glickman said.

Biden has been in talks with allies and partners to join in additional releases of oil, such that the world market will get more than the 180 million barrels total being pledged by the U.S.

OPEC and allied oil producers, including Russia, decided Thursday to stick to a modest increase in the amount of crude they pump to the world, a step that supports higher prices even as the Biden administra­tion plans to try to lower them by releasing oil from strategic reserves.

The group, known as OPEC+, said it would add 432,000 barrels per day in May, as it works to gradually restore production cuts made during the depths of the coronaviru­s pandemic. That’s slightly up from 400,000 barrels in previous months, with officials saying they’re revising baseline production levels.

The alliance has been unmoved by pleas from oil-consuming countries to pump more oil as energy prices soar, fueling inflation worldwide. High prices have helped Russia — the world’s largest exporter with 12% of the global market — offset some of the economic pain from Western sanctions over its invasion of Ukraine.

The U. S. and European sanctions have dealt a severe blow to Russia’s economy but contain exceptions for energy payments. That is a U.S. concession to European allies who are much more dependent on Russian energy than the U.S., which has banned the import of Russian oil. Europe by contrast gets 40% of its natural gas and 25% of its oil from Russia, and officials there have shied away from a boycott, instead aiming to reduce dependency through conservati­on and boosting wind and solar energy as fast as they can over the next several years.

U.S. USE, OUTPUT

Americans on average use about 21 million barrels of oil daily, with about 40% of that devoted to gasoline, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion. That total accounts for about one-fifth of total global consumptio­n of oil.

Domestic oil production is equal to more than half of U.S. usage, but high prices have not led companies to return to their pre-pandemic levels of output. The U.S. is producing on average 11.7 million barrels daily, down from 13 million barrels in early 2020.

Republican lawmakers have said the problem results from the administra­tion being hostile to oil permits and the constructi­on of new pipelines such as the Keystone XL. Democrats say the country needs to move to renewable energy such as wind and solar that could reduce the dependence on fossil fuels and Putin’s leverage.

Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., blasted Biden’s action to tap the reserve without first taking steps to increase American energy production, calling it “a Band-Aid on a bullet wound.

Daines called Biden’s actions “desperate moves that avoid what he called the real solution: “investing in American energy production,” and getting “oil and gas leases going again.”

The administra­tion says increasing oil output is a gradual process and the release would provide time to ramp up production. It also wants to incentiviz­e greater production by putting fees on unused leases on government lands, something that would require congressio­nal approval.

Oil producers have been more focused on meeting the needs of investors than consumers, according to a survey released last week by the Dallas Federal Reserve. About 59% of the executives surveyed said investor pressure to preserve “capital discipline” amid high prices was the reason they weren’t pumping more, while fewer than 10% blamed government regulation.

In his remarks Thursday, Biden tried to shame oil companies that he said are focused on profits instead of putting out more barrels, saying that adding to the oil supply was a patriotic obligation.

“This is not the time to sit on record profits: It’s time to step up for the good of your country,” the president said.

The steady release from the reserves would be a meaningful sum and come near to closing the domestic production gap relative to February 2020, before the coronaviru­s caused a steep decline in oil output.

Still, the politics of oil are complicate­d with industry advocates and environmen­talists both criticizin­g the planned release. Groups such as the American Petroleum Institute want to make drilling easier, while environmen­tal organizati­ons say energy companies should be forced to pay a special tax on windfall profits instead.

The administra­tion in November announced the release of 50 million barrels from the strategic reserve in coordinati­on with other countries. And after the Russia-Ukraine war began, the U.S. and 30 other countries agreed to an additional release of 60 million barrels from reserves, with half of the total coming from the U.S.

According to the Department of Energy, which manages it, more than 568 million barrels of oil were held in the reserve as of March 25. After the release, the government would begin to replenish the reserve once prices have sufficient­ly fallen.

News of the administra­tion’s planning was first reported by Bloomberg.

 ?? (AP/Patrick Semansky) ?? “This is a moment of consequenc­e and peril for the world, and pain at the pump for American families,” President Joe Biden said Thursday.
(AP/Patrick Semansky) “This is a moment of consequenc­e and peril for the world, and pain at the pump for American families,” President Joe Biden said Thursday.

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