
US Strategic Oil Reserve Hits 43-Year Low as Iran Conflict Drains Stockpile
Washington’s emergency crude inventory has fallen to 340.3 million barrels, slipping below the trough reached after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as the Trump administration taps the reserve to contain energy prices.
The United States’ Strategic Petroleum Reserve has fallen to its lowest level since July 1983, dropping to 340.3 million barrels after the Trump administration authorised the release of a further 8.9 million barrels in a single week. The drawdown, confirmed by federal data published on Monday, pushes the emergency stockpile below the previous historic low recorded in the summer of 2023, when President Joe Biden ordered releases to calm markets roiled by Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Viewed from Washington, the depletion is a calculated trade-off: sacrificing long-term supply security to shield American consumers and the broader economy from the immediate price shock of the widening conflict with Iran.
The reserve, which stood at roughly 415 million barrels when hostilities erupted in late February, has now shed some 75 million barrels — an 18 per cent decline in under four months. It currently holds less than half of its total capacity, a stark contrast to the early 1980s, when Ronald Reagan’s administration was still filling the caverns for the first time and the US economy was a fraction of its present size. The pace of withdrawals has accelerated as the White House seeks to dampen the inflationary impact of disrupted Middle Eastern energy flows, using the SPR as a primary tool alongside diplomatic pressure on other producers to raise output.
Analysts in London note that the reserve’s erosion leaves the world’s largest economy with a thinning buffer against future supply shocks. The SPR was originally conceived as an insurance policy against physical disruptions — embargoes, hurricanes, or pipeline failures — not as a mechanism for managing prices during geopolitical crises. Yet the Trump administration’s approach mirrors the Biden-era tactic of treating the reserve as a market-calming lever, a strategy that European energy experts warn could backfire if the standoff with Iran deepens or spreads to the Strait of Hormuz. From Tehran, the drawdowns are likely read as a sign of American vulnerability, an acknowledgment that the conflict is inflicting real economic pain despite Washington’s military superiority.
In Moscow, where the Kremlin has closely observed Western energy vulnerabilities since its own invasion of Ukraine, the dwindling US reserve underscores the global ripple effects of protracted military entanglements. The 2023 releases after Russia’s assault on Ukraine had already shrunk the SPR to a 40-year nadir; the current conflict has now driven it even lower. While the US remains the world’s top oil producer, its reliance on the reserve to stabilise prices reveals the limits of domestic production in insulating the economy from geopolitical turmoil.
Looking ahead, the trajectory of the SPR will depend heavily on the duration of the Iran conflict and the administration’s willingness to continue sacrificing strategic depth for short-term price relief. With the reserve now at levels not seen since the Reagan build-up phase, the margin for further large-scale releases is narrowing. Any additional supply disruption — whether from escalation in the Gulf, a major hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico, or coordinated output cuts by OPEC+ — would leave Washington with far fewer barrels to deploy. The current policy, while politically expedient, is steadily eroding the very shock-absorption capacity the reserve was designed to provide.
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The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve has fallen to 340.3 million barrels, the lowest level since 1983, when the Reagan administration was filling it. The ongoing drawdowns are aimed at managing supply disruptions.
The US strategic reserve has plunged to its lowest in four decades as the Trump administration keeps tapping it to cushion the war with Iran and curb energy prices. Since the conflict erupted in late February, the stockpile has shrunk by 75 million barrels, falling below half its total capacity and exceeding the previous low reached after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
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