S-2181-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Gary Peters (D-MI)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Energy (DOE) to study the feasibility and effectiveness of creating a national strategic propane reserve, separate from the existing Strategic Petroleum Reserve. If the study concludes a reserve is warranted, DOE would then be required to develop an implementation plan identifying the most practical method for establishing it.
Who benefits
Rural households that rely on propane for home heating — an estimated 5–6 million homes, concentrated in the Midwest, Northeast, and rural South. Propane-dependent farmers who use it for grain drying and livestock operations. Small businesses and schools in areas without natural gas infrastructure. Propane distributors and suppliers who could benefit from price stabilization during supply disruptions. Low-income rural households on fixed incomes who are most vulnerable to price spikes.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would bear the cost of the study and, if a reserve is established, its construction and maintenance. Competing energy sectors (natural gas, heating oil) that could face indirect market disadvantages if propane supply is stabilized by a federal reserve. DOE staff who would absorb new administrative responsibilities. Potentially, propane market participants who could face price distortions if a federal reserve is used to release supply.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that propane supply disruptions — like the severe shortage during the 2013–2014 polar vortex, which caused prices to spike over 300% in some Midwest markets — left rural families and farmers without affordable heat during dangerous cold snaps. They contend that a strategic reserve, modeled on the proven Strategic Petroleum Reserve framework, would provide a buffer against future disruptions and protect the roughly 5–6 million households with no practical alternative heating source.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that propane is a private commodity traded in competitive markets, and that a federal reserve could distort price signals, crowd out private storage investment, and create long-term market dependency on government intervention. They contend that the 2013–2014 shortage was addressed by existing market mechanisms and that the cost of building, maintaining, and managing a national reserve may far exceed the benefits compared to targeted assistance programs for vulnerable households.