U.S. energy chief says Biden would veto House Republican bill on oil
reserve
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[January 24, 2023]
By Steve Holland, Timothy Gardner and Nandita Bose
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden will veto a bill by U.S. House
of Representatives Republicans on the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR)
if it passes Congress, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said on
Monday.
In a letter last week, Granholm warned Republicans that limiting the
Democratic president's authority to tap the nation's oil reserves would
undermine national security, cause crude oil shortages, and raise
gasoline prices.
"He will not allow the American people to suffer because of the
backwards agenda that House Republicans are advancing" Granholm,
speaking to reporters at a White House briefing, said of Biden.
The bill, called HR21, would prohibit the energy secretary from tapping
the SPR without producing a plan to increase oil and gas leasing on
federal lands - unless the release is for a severe oil supply emergency.
The House, which Republicans control by a narrow margin, is expected to
vote on the bill as soon as this week. The legislation would face an
uphill battle in the Senate, controlled by Democrats.
Republican lawmakers say they are concerned that last year's releases
from the SPR, the biggest amount of crude oil from any president, have
deteriorated the ability to store, pipe and pump oil at the SPR, which
holds crude across series of underground natural caverns on the Texas
and Louisiana coasts.
"We would like to curtail use of the SPR for only those situations where
there's a severe supply interruption," a Republican aide to the House
Committee on Energy and Commerce told reporters.
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The Bryan Mound Strategic Petroleum
Reserve, an oil storage facility, is seen in this aerial photograph
over Freeport, Texas, U.S., April 27, 2020. REUTERS/Adrees
Latif/File Photo
Biden tapped the SPR repeatedly last year in response to oil prices
that jumped due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine and as travel
increased while the COVID-19 pandemic eased.
Biden announced last March a record 180 million-barrel sale over six
months that drove the reserve's level to its lowest since late 1983.
The Energy Department this month rejected the first batch of bids
from oil companies to resupply a small amount of crude to the SPR.
Despite that rejection, Granholm said she is confident the United
States will be able to refill the SPR and save taxpayers money by
buying oil at a lower price than the government originally purchased
the supplies.
“The offers that we received did not meet specification or price,”
the secretary said. She said the administration would soon announce
how it will buy back some initial replenishment oil for the reserve.
(Reporting by Steve Holland, Nandita Bose and Timothy Gardner in
Washington; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Marguerita Choy)
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