Leveraging the SPR
It's remarkable how quickly the debate over the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) has shifted from halting additions to it, to draining it. The former was eminently sensible, in light of the cost of the program and the possibility that diverting small quantities of light, sweet crude into storage was having a disproportionate impact on the price of all oil. The balance of risks strongly favored suspending additions to the SPR; quite the contrary is true for using SPR oil to create a brief, convenient slump in the oil market, while diverting attention from the more serious discussion of increasing supply and reducing demand--both sides of which would be harmed by a non-emergency release from the SPR.
Make no mistake: the current SPR is a relic of the energy crisis of the 1970s that merits serious re-thinking about its fundamental purpose and the best way to achieve it in a very different economic and geopolitical environment. It is also possible to conceive of ways in which oil in the SPR could be used to speed up the contribution of production from new oil fields, once they are identified and under development, via SPR vs. reservoir exchanges. However, such considerations are quite different from simply dumping SPR oil into the market--volumes that under the policy passed by this Congress could not be replaced as long as oil remains expensive--for no purpose other than to provide some relief at the gas pump, where prices are already likely to fall by another 25-35 cents per gallon, based on the past week's drop in the crude oil and gasoline futures markets.
The problems with releasing SPR oil now are straightforward. Inventory is not production. The proposed draw-down is not sustainable, while the production that new drilling could add would contribute to our energy supplies for a generation. Moreover, oil prices are a classic stock-and-flow system, reflecting the current balance between actual supply and actual demand, and the difference between actual inventory and desired inventory. Although the flow of SPR oil into the market would create a temporary glut and drive down the price of oil for prompt delivery, the subsequent lower inventory levels--even for an emergency back-up such as the SPR--could result in even higher prices after the release program ended than before it began. At the same time, this signal--not just from lower current prices but also from the demonstrated willingness of the government to use the SPR to manipulate the market--would deter new energy projects, including those for alternative fuels that are more attractive when oil prices are high, while impeding our transition to more efficient vehicles.
The world has changed in many ways since the SPR was first opened, and some of those changes make it even more essential for the US to have quick access to large volumes of oil in extremis. Among other things, our net oil imports have doubled since President Ford signed the SPR into law in 1975. Although oil prices remain high, supply still meets demand. Yet it is far too easy to envision plausible scenarios in which that would not be the case, involving terrorism, expanded conflict in the Middle East, or the effects of Peak Oil. In any of those cases, we might find that the SPR's current 160 days of supply at its 4.4 million barrel per day maximum delivery rate are not nearly as ample as they seem.
Aside from expediency, the theory behind releasing SPR oil now is based on a flawed narrative involving a bubble in oil prices. If the evidence were clear that supply and demand would balance at a much lower oil price, and that speculators were responsible for a large fraction of the current oil price, then I could support using a brief release from the SPR to crush speculation. The reality appears much different. Oil prices have fallen since this debate started, largely because of the extraordinary reduction in demand that high prices and a weak economy have triggered--and not because the market sees a realistic prospect of a SPR release this year. Oil is trading today below $125 per barrel for delivery in September 2008, as well as for delivery in December of 2010, 2011 and 2012. That could change tomorrow, due to some event, but it suggests that the impact of speculation is more like the foam in a glass of beer than a steadily-inflating bubble. The interests of the nation would be better served by a Congressional commission on re-engineering the SPR for the 21st century, than by Congressional legislation to fritter away this $88 billion asset in the pursuit of short-term goals.
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Other Posts by Geoffrey Styles
E15's Problems Are Symptomatic of A Failing Biofuels Policy - May 22, 2012
Are Chesapeake's Problems A Red Flag For Shale Gas? - May 17, 2012
Where Gas is Already $10 per Gallon - May 9, 2012
Resources from Space? - May 4, 2012
US Natural Gas Price Nears $10 per Barrel Equivalence - April 30, 2012
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RobertRapier said:
Mark, yes I should have been more precise: It was one of those other sites, and in fact the comment - pointing out the contradictions among those who favor reigning carbon emissions and tapping the SPR - was never posted.
On your second point, in an economic downturn, the country won't have to worry about prioritizing a carbon emissions reduction. That would be taken care of by the downturn.
MarkLazen said:
Robert--I assume you mean your comment is in moderation limbo at one of those OTHER sites. Such a thing could never happen here at TEC :-)
But to your point, the only logical argument I've heard in favor of bringing down energy prices to some degree is one driven by concern that energy costs will force an economic downturn, and that a country in recession won't prioritize carbon emissions reduction.
I said it was logical, not that I agree with it.
History clearly shows that without price pressure no serious steps will be taken to move away from fossil fuels. That the sycophants of pure markets would argue otherwise is disingenuous at best..
RobertRapier said:
Geoff, we are certainly on the same page here. I can't understand the contradictory positions of people who are concerned about climate change, but think we need to tap the SPR to lower prices. In fact, I attempted to post this in response to an essay proposing this idea, but apparently it is in moderation limbo:
Count me among those who thinks tapping the SPR is a terrible idea. It boggles my mind that people who care about Global Warming think we need to make gasoline cheaper. If you want conservation, keep prices high. If you drop prices, you spur demand. People are not going to respond to a push for conservation. If tapping the SPR causes prices to drop, people are going to drive more and you will do serious damage to the current rush to dump SUVs for smaller cars. That is the reality. It isn't a coincidence that Europeans use half the per capita energy usage of the U.S., or that public transportation is much more popular. No, a large factor is that they have kept fuel prices artificially high. You would have us lower prices - currently at less than half the price in Europe - and thus people can afford more, and will consume more.
And if oil has peaked, and we are tapping the SPR now, where does that leave us when prices are double what they are now?
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Scott Edward Anderson is a consultant, blogger, and media commentator who blogs at The Green Skeptic. More »
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Robert Rapier works in the energy industry and writes and speaks about energy and the environment. More »
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