|
U.S. opening oil reserve
September 23, 2004
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - The federal government said Thursday it plans
to loan out a limited amount of crude oil from the nation's strategic
reserve in a bid to offset shortages caused by Hurricane Ivan.
The move comes less than six weeks ahead of the presidential
election, and could help ease shortages in Florida, Louisiana and
other battleground states.
The Energy Department said it would negotiate with
companies whose oil refineries were affected by the storm.
"I have authorized these negotiations in response
to the physical disruption of offshore oil production and imports
in the Gulf Region caused by Hurricane Ivan's destruction,"
said Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham in a statement.
The reserve, with about 670 million barrels of oil
stored in underground salt caverns in Texas and Louisiana, was created
by Congress in 1975 after the Mideast oil embargo, in a bid to protect
American consumers against supply disruptions, including natural
disasters.
The news came after oil markets closed in New York,
but did send prices edging lower in after-hours trading.
Light crude for November delivery fell 21 cents to
$48.25 a barrel in after-hours trading, after hitting $49, the highest
in a month, during regular trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
That was near the record trading high of $49.40 hit last month.
Earlier in the day a Congressional source told Reuters
the loans from the reserve would be for two to three weeks. A separate
source said the two emergency loans would be for 100,000 to 200,000
barrels and for 1 million to 2 million barrels.
Energy Department statistics released this week showed
that crude oil inventories dropped by 11 million barrels in the
Gulf region over the past three weeks.
The last time Washington loaned oil from the reserve
was in late 2002, when Hurricane Lili disrupted shipments into Gulf
Coast distribution hubs.
Department officials stressed that this was not a
major withdrawal from the reserve, but rather a short-term loan
for some companies that won't get deliveries for a week or two.
The department said the oil to be loaned would be
returned after supply conditions return to normal.
More Financial News
|