Washington DC June 11 2023: The U.S. Department of Energy said on Friday it awarded supply contracts to five companies to deliver 3.1 million barrels of crude oil to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in August at an average price of $73 per barrel.
The DOE had announced the purchase plan in May as a step to refill the emergency stockpile after a record release following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year.
“These 3 million barrels are being purchased for an average price of about $73 per barrel, lower than the average of about $95 per barrel that SPR crude was sold for in 2022, securing a good deal for taxpayers,” the DOE said in a press release.
Companies winning the awards were: Atlantic Trading and Marketing (1 million barrels), Exxon Mobil (XOM.N) (900,000 barrels), Gunvor USA (600,000 barrels), Macquarie Commodities Trading (300,000 barrels) and Sunoco Partners Marketing & Terminals (300,000 barrels).
The administration had previously said it would start to buy oil back into the reserve when prices were at or below $72 per barrel. Benchmark U.S. crude futures traded around $70 a barrel on Friday.
The barrels will be delivered to the Big Hill SPR site in Texas, the DOE said.
The department also said it launched a new solicitation for another 3 million barrels for delivery to the stockpile’s Big Hill site in September. It said bids should be received by June 20, with awards by the end of the month.
The Biden administration last year conducted the largest ever sale from the SPR of 180 million barrels, part of a strategy to stabilize soaring oil markets and combat high pump prices in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The sale angered Republicans who accused the administration of leaving the U.S. with too thin a supply buffer to adequately respond to a future supply crisis.
It also became a sore point for U.S. relations with Saudi Arabia by depressing prices for the kingdom’s top export.
The sales brought the SPR inventory to around 372 million barrels, the lowest since 1983, amounting to just under 20 days of cover at current U.S. consumption rates.