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Thursday, November 21, 2024

Wisconsin gas prices rise 15 cents in one week, Barrasso says lasting solution is 'unleashing American energy production, not draining our own emergency supply'

Gasprices

Gasoline prices are soaring again. | Pixabay/Paul Brennan

Gasoline prices are soaring again. | Pixabay/Paul Brennan

The minor relief from sky-high pump prices was short-lived, especially in the West and in the state of Wisconsin where gas prices have completely soared in the last week.

Analysts continue to be critical of President Biden's tapping into the nation's emergency oil supply, and say domestic production is instead the solution to these record-high prices.

"The administration may try to pretend otherwise, but President Biden’s keep-it-in-the-ground policies are a major reason Americans are facing an energy-cost crisis," U.S. Sen.  John Barrasso (R-Wyoming) wrote in an opinion column. "Unleashing American energy production, not draining our own emergency supply, is the lasting solution to high prices." 

According to AAA price data, the cost of a gallon of gas in Wisconsin has risen 15 cents in the last week and 45 cents in the last month. The current average is $4.03 per gallon, while 7 days ago it was $3.88 per gallon and a month ago it was $3.58.          

According to a Wall Street Journal analysis, the Biden administration has leased fewer acres for offshore and federal land oil-and-gas drilling than any other administration in its early stages, dating back to the end of World War II. The analysis data proves that President Biden’s Interior Department leased 126,228 acres for drilling during his first 19 months in office. No other president since Richard Nixon in 1969-70 leased out fewer than 4.4 million acres at this stage in his first term.               

 After signing a  series of executive orders that prioritized climate change in early  2021, President Biden has taken action to remove fossil fuels entirely in America-- from killing the  Keystone XL pipeline to banning oil and gas leasing on federal land, which had provided around one-fifth of the total production in the United States as of 2019, according to the report "Europe's Energy Crisis: A Warning to America" issued by the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.

As of April 1, the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserve held 564.58 million barrels of oil in stock. As of Sep. 30, 2022, the SPR inventory stood at 416.4 million barrels of oil, a decrease of 148 million barrels since Biden's initial release.

In his effort to curb high gas prices earlier this year, Biden began tapping into the nation's emergency crude oil supply in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR). On Thursday, March 31, he announced the release up to 180 million barrels of crude oil from the SPR over a six-month period.

According to OPEC+ sources, the influential alliance of some of the world’s most powerful oil producers is reportedly considering their largest output cut since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, CNBC reported. The number of barrels coming off the market will likely bring a return of crude oil prices nearing $100 a barrel, analysts say.

Amidst rising fuel prices back in November 2021, OPEC and its oil-producing partners rejected President Biden’s calls for increased production, retorting that if the United States believes the   world’s economy needs more energy, then it should use the capability to increase production itself, Forbes reported.

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