The Great Tapping
In response to market turmoil, including the war in Ukraine and subsequent supply fears, governments around the world made an unprecedented decision: they opened the taps to their strategic petroleum reserves (SPRs). The United States led the charge,
releasing a historic 180 million barrels in 2022 alone. This was part of a coordinated effort with other International Energy Agency (IEA) member nations to combat soaring prices and prevent a global economic shock. These reserves, vast underground salt caverns filled with crude oil, were created for precisely this kind of emergency—to act as an insurance policy against severe supply disruptions. However, the scale and duration of these releases were unlike anything seen before, fundamentally changing the role of SPRs from a last-resort buffer to an active tool for market management.
The Price of Stability
The strategy, in the short term, worked. The massive injection of oil into the market helped to cool down red-hot prices, pulling them back from painful highs and providing relief to consumers at the pump. Analysts credit the releases with preventing a much steeper price spike, which could have tipped fragile economies into recession. By adding supply when commercial production couldn't keep up with post-pandemic demand, governments successfully fought inflation and maintained a fragile market balance. However, this came at a significant cost. The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve, for example, fell to its lowest level in 40 years. This has left the world's largest economy, and the global market it anchors, with significantly less room to maneuver in the face of future crises.
A Thinner Safety Net
As of mid-2026, the consequences of this policy are becoming clear. Global emergency stockpiles are precariously low. The US reserve is less than half full, holding around 316 million barrels against an authorized capacity of 714 million. The situation is similar in other nations. India, a major oil importer, has its reserves at only 64% capacity, providing less than 10 days of import cover—well below the IEA's recommended 90-day supply for member countries. This depleted state creates a new form of vulnerability. With geopolitical tensions remaining high, particularly in the Middle East, the world's ability to absorb another major supply shock is severely compromised. The very tool that calmed the last crisis has been largely spent, raising the stakes for any new disruption.
The High Cost of Refilling
Now, governments face the difficult and expensive task of replenishing their reserves. The logic was to sell high and buy low. However, refilling hundreds of millions of barrels is not a simple task. It requires purchasing vast quantities of oil without causing the very price spikes the reserves are meant to prevent. Efforts to buy back oil have been hampered by persistently high prices, making it costly for taxpayers. In the US, the Department of Energy has slowly started the process, but it could take years and billions of dollars to restore the SPR to its former levels. Furthermore, the infrastructure of the reserves themselves has aged, with repeated drawdowns causing strain and requiring costly maintenance, reducing the speed at which they can be refilled.
















