--
Obama is a desperate man trying to hold onto his presidency, but this
desperation is either illustrating his extreme stupidity or
intellectual dishonesty. Foes who argue that the SPR should be
reserved for use only in the event of a supply crisis are exactly
right, and that is why moves like this are unprecedented. President
Obama has chosen to run in the same race as former President George
W. Bush in an effort to win the dumbest president of all time award.
-- JB, Managing Editor
U.S.
to seek G8 support for oil reserve release: Kyodo
U.S.
President Barack Obama will seek support to tap emergency oil
reserves from other Group of Eight leaders at a summit this weekend
before the European Union's July embargo of Iranian crude, Kyodo news
agency reported on Wednesday
16
May, 2012
The
report suggests that a slide in oil prices to their lowest in months
has not halted U.S. efforts to use strategic oil stockpiles to offset
diminishing exports from Iran, which is facing tough new sanctions on
its oil industry.
The
EU ban on imports comes into full force in July.
Kyodo
said Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda was expected to support
the call, which comes after several months of discussion with allies
including France and Britain. It is the first indication that Japan
may support the move, although it is far from clear that skeptical
nations like Germany have been won over.
The
White House declined comment on the report.
"General
energy and climate change issues will be discussed at the G8, as part
of a larger focus on the economic issues. As we have said repeatedly,
all options remain on the table, but we have no additional
announcement to make," an administration official said.
Separately,
a French diplomatic source suggested that newly-elected Socialist
President Francois Hollande was also prepared to go along with
efforts to tap government-held stockpiles, a change of stance from
prior to the vote.
"The
U.S. has an approach that we don't condemn," a diplomatic source
under the new presidency said, without specifying what the U.S.
approach was. "I think the discussions will be easy and I don't
expect any conflict on this question," he added ahead of a
Friday meeting between Obama and Hollande.
In
pursuing what would be an unprecedented second release of the
Strategic Petroleum Reserve during his term, Obama may be embarking
on a risky political strategy. While he may help head off a damaging
spike in gasoline prices this summer, he also risks attack from foes
who argue that the SPR should be reserved for use only in the event
of a supply crisis.
"As
an economic matter, the timing would require explanation. As a
foreign policy tool this would be a smart bomb detonated in the heart
of the Iranian economy with no physical casualties," said David
Goldwyn, who headed international energy affairs at the State
Department until early 2011. "You have to love the move from a
strategic perspective."
U.S.
crude oil prices, which were already down sharply when the news hit,
edged still lower after the report. Oil closed down 1.24 percent at
$92.81 a barrel.
Oil
traders have been on alert for a possible SPR release since March,
when news of discussion first surfaced amid signs that Iran's oil
exports were already starting to suffer. But prices have fallen 16
percent since then, dropping to their lowest in months on concerns
about global economic growth.
SATURDAY
DISCUSSION
Obama
will raise the request during a discussion of energy issues on
Saturday at the meeting in Camp David, stressing the need to
stabilize oil prices and demonstrate solidarity in putting more
pressure on Iran, Kyodo reported, citing sources close to Japan-U.S.
ties that it didn't name.
Kyodo
said that it was uncertain whether other G8 countries would support
Obama's call. Some, such as Germany, have tended to resist using
emergency stockpiles. The International Energy Agency's chief Maria
van der Hoeven said two weeks ago she saw no need for tapping stocks
as the market was well supplied.
A
representative for the IEA, which coordinates energy policy among the
world's industrialized energy consumers, had no comment on Wednesday.
Energy
Commissioner Guenther Oettinger told Reuters earlier on Wednesday
that the European Commission is in close contact with the United
States and the IEA, but sees no immediate need for any release of oil
stocks.
Kyodo
did not provide any details as to when such a release could occur,
but many analysts say Iran's exports could decline sharply from July
as tough new EU sanctions on oil shipments come into full effect.
Last
year, the IEA coordinated a global release of 60 million barrels in
order to offset the war in Libya, which had cut off the OPEC member's
1.2 million barrel per day of exports.
High
gasoline prices remain a vulnerability for Obama ahead of the
November 6 election, even though they have slipped for six straight
weeks.
Edward
Markey, a Democratic congressman who has urged the president to use
the reserves, said Obama's discussion in recent months had already
helped take some speculative money out of oil prices.
"Going
forward, the uncertainties arising from Iran's nuclear ambitions, and
the prospect of economic sanctions against Tehran, justifies the
president's coalition-building to deploy oil reserves if needed to
protect American drivers and the world economy," he said in a
statement.
Republicans
say Obama could do much more to open up oil drilling on public lands
and have blasted his decision to delay permitting of the Keystone XL
pipeline to ship Canadian crude south to the United States. Obama, on
the other hand, has noted that U.S. oil production has risen steadily
in the past few years.
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