A few facts about the SPR need to be discussed. First, according to the eia.gov website, the SPR currently holds approximately 727 million barrels of crude oil. Second, according to the DOE website (http://fossil.energy.gov/programs/reserves/spr/spr-sites) all of the SPR storage sites are in deep, massive salt caverns underlying Texas and Louisiana coastline. The caverns range in size from 6 to 35 million barrels in capacity; a typical cavern holds 10 million barrels and cylindrical in shape with a diameter of 200 feet and a height of 2,000 feet. The reserve contains 62 of these underground caverns. Third, SPR oil can be distributed through the interstate pipelines to nearly half of the 141 US refineries.
Source: http://fossil.energy.gov/programs/reserves/spr/spr-sites
So, how much oil is in the SPR as it relates to the people? The EIA supplies weekly petroleum data to the market place every Wednesday at 10:30AM Eastern Time. For the week ending June 3, 2011, crude oil input to refineries (141 refineries in the US) was 15.1 million barrels per day. If we used the SPR to replace that 15.1 million barrels per day of supply, then we would deplete the SPR in 48 days. This clearly is not a go short-term solution.
OK, that will not happen because we produce a portion of that - 5.6 million barrels of the 15.1 million barrels per day total, or 37%. For the week, we imported a net of 8.6 million barrels, or 56% of our needs. AGAIN, WE IMPORTED 56% OF OUR NEEDS. If we used the SPR to replace our imports, then we would deplete the SPR in 85 days. Again, this is no short-term solution.
If we were to use the SPR to replace what Libya is not producing, according to the EIA Libya Country Analysis Brief, an estimate of 1.8 million barrels per day, then we would deplete the SPR in 403 days. Gasoline prices for the month of May averaged $3.96 per gallon. Just for contrast, across the EU, the average cost of a gallon of gasoline is about $8.70 (most of which is tax). The SPR should not be used for anything less than a catastrophic event, such as the bombing of the Saudi Ras Tanura or Jeddah refineries.
So, how long would it take to get Congressman Ed Markey's 30 million barrels of oil to be released, or 4% of the total SPR? Refining capacity for the week ending June 3, 2011, was an average of 87.2 percent of operable capacity from our 141 US refineries (Gulf Coast was at 92.0% capacity - the high, and East Coast was at 71.0% capacity - the low). The latest, highest operating rate was 95.8% in May of 2003 and the all-time high operating rate was in August 1998 of 99.9%. Operating at the highest rates with high temperatures for a long period of time is never a good idea. If we used 95% as a more sustainable rate, then the refining complex of 141 refineries with an operable refining capacity of 16.994 million barrels per day, then we can achieve a 16.1 million barrels per day capacity. At current levels of refining, we could only add an extra 1 million barrels per day of capacity. That means that assuming that the SPR could deliver oil to the refinery on day one, we would blast through that Congressman Ed Markey's 30 million barrels release in 30 days. What kind of impact would that really have on prices? Not much!
Think wisely and act rationally.
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