The Strategic Petroleum Reserve will receive an additional 40 million barrels of crude after the Iran conflict ends through existing repayment agreements, Energy Secretary Chris Wright said in a Fox Business interview on Friday.
Companies that borrowed oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in recent months will return the crude with premiums, leaving the reserve with more oil than it originally released.
"Each barrel we flow out, we're getting 1.25 barrels back next year. We're going to add 40 million barrels to the SPR after this conflict is over," Wright said.
The Department of Energy is loaning about 133 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to companies that will repay the crude with premiums of up to 24%.
"I'm not concerned, because we're not selling any barrels of oil, we're flowing oil to the marketplace in the short term when it needs it, and we're trading those barrels," Wright added.
Wright said the repayment agreements will replenish the SPR without imposing any costs on US taxpayers.