The Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) released 600 Mbbl of sweet crude and added 200 Mbbl of sour crude, for a total drop of 400 Mbbl over the week ending March 31st. This marks the start of a 26 MMbbl spring sale that wasn't anticipated to begin until April 1st. Despite some hand-wringing from some industry insiders, this sale was congressionally mandated in Section 403 of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 and Section 32204 of the Fixing America’s Surface Transportation Act. It is the last planned congressionally mandated sale until 2026. To fulfill the mandate, the SPR will release roughly 2 Mbbl per week through June 30, 2023, sourcing crude from all four SPR storage sites. The 26 MMbbl were awarded to six companies as listed below.
| MMbbl | |
| Marathon Petroleum Supply and Trading LLC | 8.4 |
| Equinor Marketing & Trading | 7.3 |
| Shell Trading (US) Company | 3.6 |
| Aramco Trading Americas LLC | 3.5 |
| Macquarie Commodities Trading US LLC | 1.6 |
| Phillips 66 Company | 1.6 |
| 26 |
This sale is the first draw from SPR inventories since the 180 MMbbl draw concluded the week ending January 6th and comes just as OPEC has announced 1.16 MMb/d of production cuts in addition to Russia’s recent 500 Mb/d cut. Following last year’s massive drawdown, the DOE had initially said that it would begin refilling the SPR when prices reached $72/bbl but backtracked rather than try to purchase and sell crude simultaneously.
Upon completion of the sale this summer, the SPR inventory level will be about 345 MMbbl if there are no offsetting purchases – its lowest level since Star Wars: Return of the Jedi was in theaters back in 1983. There is some concern that such a low stockpile could be a risk if supplies were disrupted (by hurricane, for example). Further, replacing the mostly sour crude grades that have been withdrawn from the SPR may prove costly since the U.S. is an importer of sour crude to balance its largely light sweet slate of domestic production.