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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - Question: How do you replace 200 million barrels of oil that you’ve used? Biden administration: A little at a time.

And that’s how it began, with an announcement that seemed timed with the one-year low in crude prices. The U.S. Department of Energy said on Friday it will start refilling the nation’s heavily drawn-down Strategic Petroleum Reserve, or SPR, from February with an initial purchase of 3 million barrels.

News of the SPR’s refilling came amid a renewed hawkish tone for interest rates from the Federal Reserve, European Central Bank and the Bank of England. The stance of the global central banks dampened risk appetite across markets and heightened recession fears, cutting short a rally in crude prices that came just after the worst week for oil in nine months.

The Biden administration drew some 200 million barrels from the SPR over the past year, sending inventories in the reserve to 38-year lows, as it attempted to bridge a global supply deficit in crude caused by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine and the West’s subsequent sanctions on Moscow.

Reliance on the SPR accelerated after the White House approved a 180-million barrel draw over a six-month period beginning May. U.S. crude surged to just above $130 a barrel in the first week of March while global benchmark Brent hit almost $140, shortly after the Ukraine invasion began. The 14-year highs in crude prices then and the sanctions on Russia combined to eventually send U.S. pump prices of gasoline to hit record highs of $5 per gallon by June.

As of Friday though, U.S. crude settled at under $75 per barrel and Brent at below $80. Gasoline at U.S. pumps averaged $3.18 per gallon, according to the American Automobile Association — although some areas in the United States with refineries in their proximity were pricing a gallon at under $3 due to cheaper costs of moving the fuel.

Oil bulls had been anticipating a major swing up in crude prices from any attempts to refill the SPR and the Biden administration has said for a while that it aimed to pay around $70 a barrel for the deed — well below the three-digit pricing expected by those long the market.

Seventy dollars a barrel is “a good price for companies and it's a good price for taxpayers", the president himself was quoted saying on Oct. 19 when asked how much the government intended to pay to bring SPR stockpiles back to their previous threshold of around 700 million barrels. As of a week ago, the reserve held just over 382 million barrels, its lowest level since March 1984.