White House won't use oil reserve, Congress to act
By Tom Doggett
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House said on Monday it won't sell crude oil from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve to help boost available oil supplies and lower prices, while Congress is ready to take on the Bush administration and will try to suspend oil deliveries to the stockpile.
"The president, as the person responsible for the safety and security of the American people, would resist any calls to start selling off Strategic Petroleum Reserve oil and we don't think it would have that big of an impact on prices," White House press secretary Dana Perino told reporters.
"It's like the fire extinguisher in case of an emergency," said Perino about the oil reserve.
She said attempts in the past to influence energy prices by using the oil stockpile have not been successful.
Perino also rejected new calls from Congress for the administration to stop adding oil to the reserve and divert those deliveries to the market, a move many lawmakers say would ease oil prices that hit a record $126.40 per barrel on Monday at the New York Mercantile Exchange.
"The president believes that we need an even larger Strategic Petroleum Reserve in order to protect ourselves against oil shocks," she said.
As a result, the Energy Department will go forward with its plan to accept bids this week from oil companies to supply millions of barrels of additional crude to the stockpile, which now holds about 703 million barrels of emergency oil at four underground storage sites in Texas and Louisiana. The stockpile can hold up to 727 million barrels of crude.
However, both the Senate and House of Representatives are expected to vote Tuesday on putting the brakes on future oil shipments to the reserve. Continued...




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