Tom Nolan + 2,443 TN April 4, 2022 President Biden’s huge SPR release announcement has pushed WTI prices back below $100. SPR release may calm crude prices only in the short term. U.S. SPR may need to be replenished at higher oil prices. https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/How-Bidens-Huge-Strategic-Oil-Release-Could-Backfire.html How Biden’s Huge Strategic Oil Release Could Backfire By Irina Slav - Apr 03, 2022, 6:00 PM CDT President Biden’s huge SPR release announcement has pushed WTI prices back below $100. SPR release may calm crude prices only in the short term. U.S. SPR may need to be replenished at higher oil prices. Join Our Community This week, the Biden administration revealed that it will release as much as 180 million barrels of crude oil in a bid to calm oil prices, which have remained above $100 per barrel for an extended period of time. The International Energy Agency, meanwhile, is coordinating a smaller but international reserve release of some 60 million barrels and has called an emergency meeting to discuss how exactly to go about it. It remains unclear whether part of the 180 SPR release in the United States will be a completely separate endeavor or if some of these barrels will be part of the IEA release. Earlier this year, the U.S. had agreed to release 30 million barrels as part of the IEA push. What is clear is that the success of these releases in calming down oil prices is quite unlikely. The United States last year announced the release of 50 million barrels in an effort to bring down prices t the pump, which were eroding Americans’ purchasing power and weighing on the President’s approval ratings. This pressured prices for a few days before they rebounded, driven by continued discipline among U.S. producers, equal discipline in OPEC+, and a relentless increase in demand for the commodity. Then Russia invaded Ukraine, and the U.S. banned imports of Russian crude and fuels. It also sanctioned the country’s financial system heavily, making paying for Russian crude and fuels too much of a headache for the dollar-based international industry. Prices soared again before retreating some, but remain firmly in three-digit territory. Related: Why We Cannot Just “Unplug” Our Current Energy System As of mid-March, the Department of Energy said, some 30 million barrels of crude from the strategic petroleum reserve had been sold or leased. That’s more than half of the 50 million barrels announced in November, and it appears to have had zero effect on price movements. But the new reserve release is a lot bigger, so it should make a difference, shouldn’t it? It amounts to some 1 million bpd over several months, per reports about White House plans in this respect. Unfortunately, but importantly, oil’s fundamentals have not changed much since November. U.S. shale oil producers, the companies that a few years ago prompted talk among analysts that OPEC was becoming increasingly irrelevant, have rearranged their priorities. They no longer strive for growth at all costs. Now they strive for happy shareholders. This has given more opportunities to smaller independent drillers with no shareholders to keep happy. Yet these have also run into challenges, mainly in the form of insufficient funding because the energy transition has had banks worrying about their reputations and their own shareholders. Pandemic-related supply disruptions have also affected the U.S. oil industry’s ability to expand output. Frac sand, cement, and equipment are among the things that have been reported to be in short supply in the shale patch. Now, there’s a shortage of steel tubing, too. Meanwhile, OPEC is doing business as usual, sticking to its commitment to add some 400,000 bpd to oil markets every month until its combined output recovers to pre-pandemic levels. Just this week, the cartel approved another monthly addition of 432,000 bpd to its combined output despite increasingly desperate calls from the U.S. and the IEA for more barrels. OPEC has been demonstrating increasingly bluntly that its interests and the interests of some of its biggest clients may not be in alignment right now. It has refused to openly condemn Russia for its actions in Ukraine and has not joined the Western sanction push. Related: U.S. Oil Demand Has Been Vastly Overestimated On the contrary, OPEC is gladly doing business with Russia. And Saudi Arabia and the UAE, the two OPEC members that actually have the capacity to boost production beyond their quotas, have deemed it unwise to undermine their partnership with Russia by acquiescing to the West’s request for more oil. In this environment, releasing whatever number of barrels from strategic reserves could only provide a very short relief at the pump. Then, it may make matters even worse. As one oil market commentator on Twitter said about the SPR release news, the White House will be selling these barrels at $100 and then may have to buy them at $150. Indeed, one thing that tends to get overlooked during turbulent times is that the strategic petroleum reserve of any country needs to be replenished. It’s not called strategic for laughs. And a 180-million-barrel reserve release will be quite a draw on the U.S. SPR, which currently stands at over 580 million barrels. If oil’s fundamentals remain the same, prices will not be lower when the time to replenish the SPR comes. This seems the most likely development. The EU, the UK, and the United States have stated sanctions against Russia will not be lifted even if Moscow strikes a peace deal with the Ukraine government. This means Russian oil will continue to be hard to come by for those dealing in dollars or euros. According to the IEA, the shortfall could be 3 million barrels daily, to be felt this quarter. OPEC+ is not straying from its course. In some good news, at least, U.S. oil production rose last week for the first time in more than two months, by a modest 100,000 bpd.By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com More Top Reads From Oilprice.com: Germany Gets Ready For Gas Rationing Russia Threatens G7 Nations As Ministers Reject Gas-For-Rubles Scheme Are You Really Being ‘Gouged’ At The Gas Pump? Latest articles from Irina Slav How Biden’s Huge Strategic Oil Release Could Backfire Published 03 April 2022 | viewed 36,442 times This week, the Biden administration revealed that it will release as much as 180 million barrels of crude oil in a bid to calm oil… Steel Shortage Adds To U.S. Shale Drillers’ Woes Published 01 April 2022 | viewed 9,366 times U.S. shale oil drillers are complaining of a shortage of steel tubing for wells, which is contributing to stagnation in production. In a Friday report,… Venezuela Scrambles To Find Oil Tankers As It Expects Sanction Relief Published 01 April 2022 | viewed 5,494 times Venezuela is reportedly looking for oil tankers in anticipation of sanction relief from Washington. 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Tom Nolan + 2,443 TN April 4, 2022 Irina Slav SUBSTACK https://irinaslav.substack.com/ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tom Nolan + 2,443 TN April 4, 2022 1 minute ago, Tom Nolan said: Irina Slav SUBSTACK https://irinaslav.substack.com/ See this... OPEC just had enough https://irinaslav.substack.com/p/opec-just-had-enough?s=r Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tom Nolan + 2,443 TN April 4, 2022 U.S. Oil and Gas Association President Tim Stewart U.S. Oil and Gas Association President Tim Stewart is interviewed on Fox Business News about the Strategic Reserve. Tim Stewart explains that it takes about 13 days before a release hits the system. Stewart goes on to say that the last two times that Biden has done this, the price of oil increased about 18%. A clip of President Biden is shown. Biden talks about the unused permits. Tim Stewart gives the statistics which point out the DECEPTION by the government on the permits…and it becomes very evident that Biden is all PR fluff and there is no REAL objective by the Administration to bring more fresh U.S. oil to the market. 5 ½ minute VIDEO - https://youtu.be/31ihDtsWAPQ 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites