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Saturday, May 25, 2013  

US mulls oil reserve release to check prices, energy cost
WASHINGTON The White House is “dusting off old plans” for a potential release of oil reserves to dampen prices and prevent high energy costs from undermining sanctions against Iran, a source with knowledge of the situation said on Thursday.  

US officials will monitor market conditions over the next few weeks, watching whether petrol prices fall after the September 3 Labour Day holiday, as they historically do, the source said.   

It was too early to detail the size of any release from the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve and other international stockpiles if a decision to proceed was taken, the source said.   

Oil prices have surged in recent weeks, with Brent crude prices closing in on $120 a barrel, up sharply from below $90 a barrel in June. The US and other Group of Eight countries studied a potential oil release in the spring but shelved the plans when prices dropped.  

As prices rise again, US officials were now collecting information from the market about potential needs and studying futures, production numbers and data on Iranian oil exports.  

“The driving force in this is both impact on the economy and impact on the Iran sanctions policy,” the source said, noting that Washington did not want rising oil prices to create a windfall for Iran while international sanctions were having an effective impact on its crude exports and revenues.  The US has not yet held talks with international partners about a coordinated move. The source noted that Britain, France, Germany and other partner nations in the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA) were receptive to a potential release a few months ago when conditions were similar.  

Those countries were concerned about the impact of high oil prices on the global economy and Iran then, and those concerns remain equally relevant now.   

The logic behind a potential release in the spring is at least if not ... more true today,” the source said.  

Within the US, tapping reserves could spark criticism from Republicans, who would cast it as a political move to boost Democratic President Barack Obama’s chances in the Nov. 6 election.  

The source said the White House had not discussed political ramifications because a decision on a release had not been made.  

A White House spokesman declined to comment. Gathering support from partner nations is likely to be the next step as Washington studies its options.  In May, the G8 put the IEA, the West’s energy adviser responsible for coordinating reserves, on standby for action, a sign at the time that Obama was winning support for tapping government-held oil stocks for the second time in two years.  

Some IEA nations could object to a release now because market conditions are less tight than they were in the spring, the source said. Saudi Arabia and Iraq were producing more and the supply disruption related to Libya was resolved.  

Reuters
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