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The decision by the International Energy Agency, or IEA, to tap into oil reserves is historic
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in its size and scope.
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400 million barrels dwarfs the number of barrels that were released after Russia invaded
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But there are many questions about whether this more ambitious effort will stop a surge
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in oil and gas prices if the war endures.
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To explore some of these questions, we're joined now by Clay Seagull, a senior fellow in
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the Energy Security and Climate Change Program at the Center for Strategic and International
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Thank you for being with us.
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So, the IEA has not laid out a clear timeline for when this release could begin, but in
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your view, how quickly could it hit the market and how much relief could it provide?
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The oil that is expected from the IEA's strategic drawdowns could hit the market relatively
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It's a little bit of a function of whether industry, meaning the oil companies that
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are connected to those reserves, are ready to receive those barrels, or if they have
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other commercial operations that are taking up bandwidth.
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But for the most part, as soon as the decision is made within days, that oil can begin
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flowing to the industry.
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And President Trump has said that the U.S. will tap the strategic oil reserve.
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Of course, as you well know, those strategic reserves are typically used for short-term
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disruptions, not prolonged crises.
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How much can this effectively stabilize prices?
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It all depends on the duration of the disruption.
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So the 20 million barrels per day of oil that come from the Mid-East Gulf and supply world
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markets is really must have for global economic prosperity and the kind of prices, inflation,
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economic conditions that we're used to.
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So what a measure like drawing down reserves from the international agency and the strategic
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petroleum reserve can do is buy us more time.
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They can extend a lifeline for us to complete the operation in the Gulf and reach a post-war
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settlement with the Iranians that will bring security back to the region and allow those
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exports to flow again.
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So it can buy us more time, but it's not a substitute to getting those exports going
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It's really just a temporary measure.
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A lifeline yet not a substitute.
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How much oil, how much of America's reserves could be tapped here?
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Well, the reserve is only about 60 percent full, following that big drawdown that you mentioned
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And the thing about the strategic petroleum reserve is it's designed to draw down very
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quickly, which is what was done a few years ago.
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Because of the plumbing and other considerations, it can only be refilled very gradually.
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And that's why we're only at about the 60 percent level.
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So I think that U.S. policy makers will probably be very judicious in deciding the volumes
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that they want to commit to this, but also, again, with an eye toward how soon the cause
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of the problem, which is the blockage in the Mid-East Gulf and the straight-of-for-mouse,
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Think of the lifeline like this.
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If you lose your job and maybe we all have, hopefully you have an emergency fund or rainy
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day fund in the bank that you can use to pay the bills until you get a new paycheck.
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It's not instead of getting a new job in a paycheck, it's in addition to for the short
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So you still need to get that job and the paycheck going again.
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And the world still needs to get that oil from the Mid-East Gulf flowing to market.
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The IEA has only done this five times before, including twice after Russia's invasion
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How much difference did those releases actually make for supply and prices?
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That was a really interesting case study from 2022, because the market was facing the
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prospect of five million barrels per day of Russian oil potentially being removed from
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And famously, crude prices soared to $130 per barrel.
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United States pump prices, what we pay at the gasoline station, $5 a gallon, and that's
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the nationwide average.
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It was a lot higher in certain states, but that was all just fearing five million barrels
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a day, disappearing.
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At the end of the day, those Russian barrels didn't disappear from the market.
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They were just reshuffled to other buyers around the world.
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And so once that happened, the oil that had been released from the drawdowns stayed on
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the market and kept prices lower for longer.
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Beyond tapping the reserve, what other tools do governments actually have to stabilize energy
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markets in a crisis like this?
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You know, the supply side interventions are pretty limited in their potential to help.
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And so the Trump administration is reportedly considering a lot of different tools in the
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toolkit, everything from the treasury, potentially intervening in the oil futures market to put
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on a short position, to backstopping insurance for the oil and gas cargos that have been
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stranded, pending safer conditions to transit through the Gulf and the strait.
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And then there's also consideration of other measures like waving certain environmental
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specifications on the handling and processing of refined products like gasoline, jet fuel,
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And I just have to stress that all of these measures can really only buy us a little bit
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more time and partially offset the missing barrels from the midi's Gulf.
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There's also some measures that folks in the region are taking.
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And so Saudi Arabia in particular has the ability to redirect some of its Gulf exports,
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not all of them, but some of their exports from the Strait of Hormuz and bypassed that
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area and send it out through the west coast of Saudi Arabia into the Red Sea.
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But those volumes are also limited.
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And then you potentially have to deal with other threats to shipping notably from the Uthi
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militia that has plagued commercial shipping for years in that part of the world.
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We could see that again.
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Thanks so much for your insights.