White House to Tap Oil Reserve Again Amid High Fuel Prices

Stacks of steel pipes
Stacks of steel pipes used for drilling oil wells at a drilling site. (Jordan Vonderhaar/Bloomberg News)

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The Biden administration is moving toward a release of at least another 10 million to 15 million barrels of oil from the nation’s emergency stockpile in a bid to balance markets and keep gasoline prices from climbing further, according to people familiar with the matter.

The move would effectively represent the tail end of a program announced in the spring to release a total of 180 million barrels of crude from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. About 165 million barrels has been delivered or put under contract since the program was put into effect.

The Biden administration also is set in October to provide details on plans to replenish the emergency stockpile. The Energy Department announced in May it was planning a new method of buybacks to allow for a “competitive, fixed-price bid process,” with prices potentially locked in well before crude is delivered.



President Joe Biden will speak about gasoline prices on Oct. 19, White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain said in a tweet.

The announcements will be part of Biden’s response to the ongoing effects of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, a senior administration official said. The administration also seeks to address anxiety about stubbornly high gasoline prices ahead of midterm elections next month and historically constrained supplies. Heading into winter, the U.S. has the lowest seasonal inventories of diesel, according to data first compiled in 1982.

Separately, the administration is still weighing limits on exports of fuel to keep more gasoline and diesel inside the U.S., according to two of the people, who weren’t authorized to speak publicly about internal deliberations. Although no timeline has been set for a decision on that potentially more dramatic step, it wouldn’t happen before November’s midterm elections, one of the people said.

Gasoline prices chart

The export control idea, which would be temporary, has sparked division within the administration, as top Biden energy adviser Amos Hochstein argues in favor of new export controls even as Deputy Energy Secretary David Turk has expressed concerns, said people familiar with the matter. Other White House officials, including Klain and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, have yet to make a recommendation.

Energy Department and White House officials have been quietly meeting this week with oil companies, including Exxon Mobil Corp. and ConocoPhillips, to notify them of what to expect while continuing to encourage additional production of oil and refined fuels.

Oil industry representatives and third-party energy analysts have cautioned that limiting fuel exports could lead to higher prices in parts of the U.S., particularly in the import-reliant Northeast.

Spokespeople for the White House didn’t immediately comment. The Energy Department referred to a previous comment from earlier this month that asserted the administration was going to look at all tools available to protect Americans and uphold commitments to allies.

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Republicans have made rising gasoline prices and inflation the centerpiece of their campaign to take control of Congress in the elections. The White House has been seeking to ease rising costs at the pump and bolster low domestic stockpiles of fuel while also responding to the OPEC+ coalition’s decision earlier this month to slash production.

Gasoline prices, one of the most visible signs of inflation, are a political headache for Biden, who in recent weeks has repeatedly warned oil companies against raising costs. Average U.S. gasoline prices were slightly lower at $3.87 a gallon on Oct. 17, according to data from auto club AAA.

“The price of gas is still too high and we need to keep working to bring it down,” Biden said at an event in Los Angeles in October.

White House economic adviser Jared Bernstein said Oct. 16 that Biden hadn’t yet made a decision on an SPR release. The reserve, which has the capacity to hold about 714 million barrels, contains 405.1 million barrels, as of Oct. 14.

“The fact is there is capacity to use the SPR to deal with some of the energy shocks we’re seeing in the world. But I’m not saying we will. That’s up to the president to decide, he hasn’t made that decision yet,” he said.

The White House had indicated that further SPR drawdowns were a possibility shortly after the OPEC+ announcement.

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