1. US Department of Energy announced yesterday an offer for delivery between October 1 and November 30, 11 mln barrels of sour crude oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserves. The move has nothing to do with operationalizing President Trump’s complaint that oil prices were too high. Instead, the sales are part of the fiscal compromise in 2015 budget legislation and the health care act of 2016.  

2The Strategic Oil Reserves was established in after the 1970s oil embargo. It can hold over 700 mln barrels. It had been tapped to ease emergencies like the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina (2005) or supply shocks, like the dramatic drop in Libyan output (2011). However, in recent years, Congress has passed legislation that entails the liquidation of some of the reserves as part of compromises to fund the federal government. Most recently, the budget agreement struck earlier this year provides for the sale of 100 mln barrels of oil by 2027. It is the largest non-emergency drawdown and is equal to around 15% of the current reserves.

3. There is a broad framework of the schedule of the sales. First, under the 2015 agreement, $350 mln of oil (of roughly 5.2 mln barrels at current prices) needs to be sold in the current fiscal year to finance the modernization of the reserves. Second, under the 2018 budget agreement calls for 30 mln barrels to be sold between FY22 and FY25, 35 mln barrels year in FY26 and FY27.T he Congressional Budget Office projected the 100 mln barrel liquidation to raise about $6.35 bln.T he budget agreement also reduced the minimum required level of SPR from 450 mln barrels to 350 mln. As of early February, when the budget agreement was struck the SPR held about 665 mln barrels. The average price of the oil purchased for the SPR was a little below $30 a barrel. 

4. The sales starting October 1 will coincide with the reinstatement of the US oil embargo against Iran (November 3).  The US is threatening to sanction other countries/companies if they violate the embargo. Many expect the embargo to cut as reduce Iranian sales by as much as a million barrels. China, one of Iran’s largest customers, has been using Iranian tankers to deliver the oil. The Trump Administration can still invoke emergency powers to liquidate as much as 30 mln barrels to head off a possible disruption caused by the embargo on Iran. Given the procedural requirements, if part of the motivation is to boost the chances of lower gasoline price by the November mid-term elections, a decision will have to be made shortly.  

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