Releases from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) since
Russia's invasion of Ukraine were designed to counter supply
shortages and stem fuel price gains. A release last fall was
aimed primarily at pushing down rising U.S gasoline prices.
The Biden administration last month added 180 million barrels to
two smaller releases since November from caverns along the U.S.
Gulf Coast. The United States has not prohibited exports of SPR
oil and some analysts believe the exports will grow.
U.S. retail gasoline and diesel prices, averaging $4.40 and
$5.55 per gallon nationally, have remained near record highs
despite the releases. Fuel demand is so strong U.S. refiners'
average per share earnings this quarter are projected to run
four times the first quarter's profit, according to analyst
projections.
Last month, U.S. oil refiner Phillips 66 loaded about 600,000
barrels of crude from the Bryan Mound cavern in Texas onto
tanker Sea Holly. It is on its way to Trieste, Italy, U.S.
customs data and Refinitiv Eikon showed. Trieste is home to a
pipeline that send oil to refineries in central Europe.
Atlantic Trading & Marketing (ATMI), an arm of French oil major
TotalEnergies, sent a little over 1 million barrels of SPR crude
to Rotterdam last month.
About 2.25 million SPR barrels on three vessels were exported to
Italy and the Netherlands in April, according to Matt Smith,
lead oil analyst for the Americas at data provider Kpler.
ATMI has secured at least 3.5 million barrels from the SPR,
while Phillips has secured at least 10 million barrels, based on
government disclosures. Other companies taking SPR oil include
Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Marathon Petroleum and Valero Energy.
Phillips 66 declined to comment on trading activities. ATMI did
not immediately respond to a request for a comment.
With continued releases of SPR over next several months, "expect
to be seeing some of those exported," Kpler's Smith said.
(Reporting by Arathy Somasekhar in Houston and Stephanie Kelly
in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)
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