TOKYO, March 1 — Ministers from International Energy Agency (IEA) member states are weighing the release of 60 million barrels from oil reserves, two sources familiar with the talks said today, to cool oil prices soaring from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
US Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm is chairing the extraordinary ministerial meeting of the Paris-based IEA, which represents mostly industrialised nations and has coordinated three emergency oil stock releases in the past.
Crude oil was trading around US$104 (RM436) a barrel today as some buyers shunned Russian barrels after Western allies imposed sanctions on Moscow, while supplies worldwide have tightened as economic demand has soared, with output struggling to keep up.
A disruption from Russia, one of the world’s top oil producers which exports around 4-5 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude, could send prices even higher.
“The rise in oil prices causes concern across the world and this has created a discussion about whether a coordinated release by IEA members of part of the existing strategic reserve would be necessary to stabilise the market,” European Union energy policy chief Kadri Simson said yesterday.
“Releasing part of these stocks is a powerful tool that member states can use, but the right conditions have to be in place,” Simson added after a meeting of energy ministers from EU countries, many of which are also IEA members.
The 30-member IEA was founded in 1974 as an energy watchdog, and defines one of its main roles as helping “coordinate a collective response to major disruptions in the supply of oil”.
Supply disruptions
Last November, the United States announced a release of 50 million barrels from the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve, a move made in concert with oil consuming nations including China, India and Japan.
The IEA did not oversee that operation, saying at the time it only responds collectively to major supply disruptions. It last coordinated a release amid the oil supply disruption wrought by the Libyan Civil War in 2011.
China, the world’s No.2 consumer and largest importer, never officially committed to that move and has been buying more for its reserves instead.
“The US is trying to put together a coalition, an international agreement, and is up for about half of this,” a senior oil industry source told Reuters, referring to the total volume of a stock release.
“This has got very little to do as yet with physical disruption, it is more about prices. So I will be very surprised if there was an official IEA-led drawdown,” the source added.
The United States is responsible for about half of the world’s strategic petroleum reserves and the other 29 IEA members — including the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan and Australia — are required to hold oil in emergency reserves equivalent to 90 days of net oil imports.
Japan has one of the largest reserves after China and the United States.
The IEA said last month that commercial oil stocks in OECD countries were at the lowest level in more than seven years and covered just under 60 days of forward demand in December. — Reuters