OREANDA-NEWS  The split within the Biden administration between open hostility to the oil industry and fears about the impact high gas prices will have on their Congressional allies in November’s midterm elections explain Washington’s “confused” energy policy, energy expert Dr. Gal Luft says.On Tuesday, Reuters reported that over five million barrels-worth of oil released by the Biden administration from the emergency SPR stockpile to help ease gas prices at home had instead been exported abroad to Europe and Asia.Commenting on the move, which has enraged Republican politicians and conservative media pundits, Dr. Luft suggested that the Biden administration probably feels it has “no choice” but to use the reserves to try to ease the collective West’s nonsensical “energy self-starvation” amid the standoff with Russia over Ukraine.

According to the Reuters report, US oil refining giant Phillips 66 shipped some 470,000 barrels of crude from the Big Hill SPR storage facility in Texas to Trieste, Italy, while Atlantic Trading & Marketing, a division of France’s Total Energy, shipped two cargoes carrying a combined 1.2 million barrels. Additional cargoes were reportedly also shipped off to the Netherlands and a refinery in India, with a tanker full of crude from the West Hackberry SPR location in Louisiana expected to set sail sometime this month, destination unknown.SPR’s Impact ‘Quite Limited’Luft believes whether it is for domestic use or attempts to help allies abroad, the impact of the release of SPR crude has actually been “quite limited,” and that there are five arguably more significant “wildcards” determining oil prices, namely* Iran’s possible return to the global oil market if Western sanctions are lifted* Biden convincing Saudi Arabia to ramp up production during his upcoming visit* a possible stabilization in Libya* whether the hurricane season impacts US domestic production, and* whether the US enters a recession.

Draining the SPRThe Biden administration plans to continue releasing one million barrels of oil per day from the SPR through October. Last week, the Department of Energy revealed that the SPR’s current inventory had slipped to about 497.9 million barrels, its lowest level since 1985. The Energy Information Administration estimates that the United States consumes about 19.78 million barrels of petroleum per day, meaning that if all production and imports were halted, the country would have about 25 days' worth of oil in reserve.While the Biden administration has blamed Russia for spiraling energy costs and referred to prices at the pump as “Putin’s price hike,” the president’s Democratic Party allies in Congress have expressed concerns over the impact the price crunch will have on their chances in the upcoming November midterm elections, where all 435 seats of the House of Representatives, 35 of the 100 seats in the Senate, and an assortment of state and local offices will be up for grabs.