General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhat happens when our Strategic oil reserves run out ?
Iran has closed the Strait again.
How many days left in our reserves ?
dalton99a
(96,126 posts)We run out of reserves at about four weeks, Trump said in France while at the Group of Seven summit, discussing the recent memorandum of understanding with Iran. You know, there are reserves all over the world, and we would really run out, and therell be a time when you wouldnt be able to get it.
He said it would be bedlam if the oil ran out.
Its not entirely clear whether Trump was referring to U.S. or global oil inventories. The White House declined to elaborate, referring The Hill back to Trumps original remarks.
https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/5928618-iran-deal-oil-reserves-g7/
ProfessorGAC
(77,617 posts)About 345 million barrels in inventory, with another 15 million in pipeline and ships.
We use a but over 20 million barrels per day.
The Failure made that number up.
RandomNumbers
(19,293 posts)how really and truly they and their ilk have fucked this country?
I don't mean brain-dead MAGAT holdouts, or those too busy playing the stock market (and winning, for now) to give a fuck about mid- and long-term consequences. I mean people who have come, or are coming, to their senses about the true consequences of this POS being elected to the US Presidency.
Just wondering if there is a reasonable sized current of remorse out there yet. But sure people will rationalize their reasons for not voting for Kamala. But maybe some are starting to realize that "she would not have been this bad".* At worst her actions would have been contained to a "normal" range around where most voters are anyway, with some things many disliked but NOT disastrous on the Trump scale.
* n.b. Of course I think Kamala would have been good, if not great. (we'll never know which). Trying to speak from the POV of someone who couldn't bring themselves to vote for her.
AZJonnie
(4,167 posts)In the most general sense, the reserves are typically built up when world oil prices are low, and depleted when world oil prices are high. If the strategic reserve were to become empty, it would be reflective of world oil prices having been high for a protracted period of time. And the longer that condition continues, the less "cushion" there is in terms of being able to protect consumers and industry from large, sudden price shocks.
Put another way, The USA can always "buy more, if it's willing to pay", so the condition of the reserve being empty is not, in and of itself, some particularly important inflection point. OTOH, the reasons it became depleted are reflective of some rather important metrics.