US to Release 172 Million Barrels of Oil for IEA Relief Plan

IEA Move and Reserve Drawdowns Shape Response to War-Driven Price Surge

Donald Trump
President Donald Trump on Feb. 20. (Evan Vucci/Associated Press)
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The Trump administration plans to release 172 million barrels from the U.S. emergency oil reserve as part of the coordinated effort by nations around the world to ease surging crude and fuel prices — less than two weeks since the beginning of the Iran war.

The release, announced by Energy Secretary Chris Wright in a statement March 11, will take about 120 days to fully deliver the oil from the Energy Department’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve. It’s part of the plan by member nations of the International Energy Agency to discharge a total of 400 million barrels from reserves globally.

“This is to tide the world over while these flows are restricted by Iran, but ultimately the United States military will prevail,” Wright said on Fox News. “Hopefully in the next few weeks we will start to see ship traffic returning to the Strait of Hormuz.”

Crude, gasoline, diesel and jet fuel prices have climbed dramatically since the U.S. and Israel began their military campaign against Iran on Feb. 28. The war has brought shipping traffic to a virtual standstill in the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil flows.



Brent crude rose back toward $100 a barrel early March 12 as Iraq stopped operations at its oil ports after two tankers were targeted.

The Strategic Petroleum Reserve currently contains roughly 415 million barrels, about 60% of its capacity, following a series of withdrawals by the Biden administration. Those included a record sale of 180 million barrels to help lower gasoline prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began in 2022, a decision that President Donald Trump and other Republicans assailed.

At the time, Trump called it an irresponsible and “futile attempt to reduce oil and gasoline prices.”

Now back in office, he is facing intense political pressure to address the sudden rise in fuel prices. November’s midterm elections that will decide control of both houses of Congress hinge in large part on Americans’ attitudes toward the costs of living, and polls show the public taking a dim view of the president’s handling of the economy.

“We’re going to be doing it very quickly, and then we’ll fill it up,” Trump told reporters March 11 after his return from a trip to Ohio and Kentucky. “We’ll fill up our reserves.”

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement that Trump was “doing what I called for three days ago, after needlessly sowing additional chaos and uncertainty. But he’s already created a lot more problems than this will solve – from the Strait of Hormuz blockade to his poorly planned and reckless war.”

Wright, in his statement, said that the U.S. had arranged to refill the reserves with approximately 200 million barrels within the next year at no cost to the taxpayer.

The secretary, in the past, has said the administration is looking at deals with private companies to refill the reserve, an apparent reference to the use of so-called royalty-in-kind in which the U.S. accepts oil and gas from producers in lieu of cash royalties on federal energy resources.

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, the chair of the White House National Energy Dominance Council, told NewsNation on March 11 that the administration has had conversations with energy companies that plan to increase domestic oil production.

ClearView Energy Partners said in a note March 11 that the broader, 400 million-barrel release provides “official recognition that the Hormuz crisis has become serious enough for the industrialized world to liquidate one-third of its oil insurance policy,”

“It remains far from clear when the strait might reopen; both naval mines and anti-ship weapons could still pose significant threats,” the Washington consulting firm added.

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On paper, the reserve, established in massive salt mines along the U.S. Gulf Coast after the Arab oil embargo of the 1970s with a maximum capacity of about 713 million barrels, can release about 4.4 million barrels a day, according to the Energy Department’s website. It takes 13 days for oil from the system to reach the open market after the president orders a sale.

However, an analysis prepared by the department in 2016 said the actual amount the reserve is capable of releasing might be limited to 1.4 million to 2.1 million barrels a day. During the 2022 release, the amount never topped more than 1.1 million a day, according to an analysis of government data by ClearView.

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