US SPR faces existential crisis
As the 50th anniversary of the Arab oil embargo approaches, policymakers gripped by energy security fears must start rethinking the purpose of emergency oil stocks
The 1973–74 Arab oil embargo caused oil prices to skyrocket and prompted consuming nations to set up emergency reserves and the IEA. While these stockpiles are a crucial insurance policy for OECD economies, the US is no longer so dependent on imports and has changed the way it uses its strategic petroleum reserve (SPR). To refill or not to refill is now the question. The 2022 shock and awe tactic of releasing 180m bl from the SPR was the largest ever, undertaken from a starting reserve level of about 600m bl. For collective action (emergency drawdown), each member country’s contribution is proportionate to its share of total oil consumption. While IEA rules require each member state to hold

Also in this section
9 April 2025
Oil’s resilience and gas’ growth will continue to define the global energy mix into 2050, according to Petroleum Economist analysis, but that does not have to spell doom and gloom for sustainability
9 April 2025
AI is powering the Middle East & North Africa’s digital transformation, but can the region meet soaring energy demand sustainably? Small modular reactors may hold the key
9 April 2025
North African producer hopeful of bringing in IOCs despite the disagreements over terms as latest bidding round is launched
9 April 2025
The surprise decision to bring on extra supply has coincided with better quota conformity from laggards in the group, Petroleum Economist analysis shows