An analyst said the loan of sweet crude oil to Marathon should not have a big impact on markets.
"This is a small, limited time swap in response to Isaac and should not have a major impact on crude prices, although, as DOE noted, it is keeping the option of a larger release on the table for future or sustained disruptions," said Bob McNally, head of the Washington-based consulting firm The Rapidan Group.
Oil futures in New York rose about $1.50 after the loan announcement to more than $96 per barrel.
The DOE has not received additional requests from other refiners along the U.S. Gulf Coast for oil loans, a source familiar with the talks said. If the agency gets more requests, it "will move expeditiously to review them" to ensure it is responding as quickly as possible to those hit by the storm, the source said.
Marathon said its 490,000 barrels per day refinery in Garyville, Louisiana, was running at reduced rates due to heavy rain but that it had not sustained significant damage.
Under the loan agreement, Marathon Petroleum Co will return an equal amount of similar oil to the reserve within three months, plus additional barrels representing interest, the DOE said. The SPR will be ready to begin delivering oil to Marathon on Friday, it said.
Exxon Mobil, Valero and Royal Dutch Shell also have refineries that were either still shut or were at reduced rates due to the storm.
Isaac made landfall this week as a Category 1 hurricane but has since moved inland and weakened to a tropical depression.
BIG DRAWDOWN LAST YEAR
The Obama administration agreed to tap 30 million barrels of oil last year - less than two days of U.S. demand - as civil war in Libya took out about 1 million bpd of crude from the country. The drawdown was part of a wider sale of 60 million barrels coordinated with the International Energy Agency.
This year sanctions have reduced Iran's oil output the same rate as last year's Libyan crisis, spurring calls from Congress to push the White House to release oil. Countries in the West believe Iran is attempting to develop nuclear arms, while Tehran says its nuclear program is for energy and medical purposes.
Maria van der Hoeven, the IEA's chief, said in Norway this week she opposed a coordinated drawdown, citing adequate global supplies. Sanctions on Iran, "didn't come out of the blue," she added.
(Additional reporting by Joshua Schneyer in New York; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Leslie Gevirtz, Tim Dobbyn and Phil Berlowitz)
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