Biden May Release Strategic Diesel Reserves to Curb Rising Prices

Biden May Release Strategic Diesel Reserves to Curb Rising Prices

Image for article titled Biden May Release Strategic Diesel Reserves to Curb Rising Prices

Photo: Brandon Bell (Getty Images)

Prices for gas and diesel are, to quickly summarize, very bad and getting worse all the time. Car owners may be feeling the war in Ukraine at the pump, but the effects of rising diesel prices have already cascaded out through the trucking and shipping industries. To ease the crunch, the White House is eyeing a possible method of mitigating prices — one that works in a bit of a roundabout way.

Unlike crude oil or cheese, the U.S. government doesn’t keep stockpiles of gasoline or diesel to release in times of crisis. Gasoline, for one, doesn’t last particularly long when stored on a shelf, and diesel doesn’t fare much better. There is, however, something the government can stockpile that’ll work in a pinch: Home heating oil.

Image for article titled Biden May Release Strategic Diesel Reserves to Curb Rising Prices

Photo: Brandon Bell (Getty Images)

Since 2000, the federal government has kept a stockpile of home heating oil in the Northeast, primarily Connecticut and Massachusetts. As diesel prices continue to climb, the White House is considering unleashing some of that reserve to increase the supply of diesel fuel on the market, according to CNN.

Diesel and home heating oil aren’t wholly interchangeable, with on-road diesel containing a number of additives that aren’t present in heating oil. Still, their function and relative energy storage are nearly identical — so close, in fact, that companies have been known to use cheaper home heating oil as a diesel fuel substitute. If you’ve ever wondered why heating oil is dyed red, there’s your answer.

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Releasing home heating oil for use as diesel fuel is an interesting proposition: It would certainly free up more supply for a market of ever-increasing demand, but it opens the door to use cases that are specifically banned by U.S. laws. If such a release were allowed, however, a bit of red in a truck’s tank could save major green in drivers’ wallets.