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Shell, Phillips 66 buy 6.4 MMbbl of oil from US emergency reserve

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- Oil companies Shell and Phillips 66 together bought 6.4 MMbbl of oil last week from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), according to a Department of Energy document released on Tuesday.

Shell bought 6.2 MMbbl of oil and Phillips 66 bought 200,000 barrels on Jan. 18, according to the department document, seen by Reuters.

The federal government held the sale to fund a revamp of the emergency oil stash, which is stored in salt caverns in Louisiana and Texas along the Gulf Coast. The Department of Energy had said it would sell up to 8 million barrels as part of its modernization program.

Shell will take delivery of 1.7 million barrels of oil to a vessel, the documents said, while the remainder of the barrels are slated for pipeline delivery.

The US lifted its decades-long ban on exporting US crude in December 2015, giving buyers of the oil the opportunity to export oil purchased from the reserves.

A spokesman for Shell declined to comment on whether the company planned to export the crude.

Phillips offered a price of $53.8985 a barrel for the oil, and Shell offered between $53.668 and $54.338 a barrel, the documents said.

On Jan. 18, benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude futures settled at $51.08 a barrel.

Shell and Phillips 66 both operate oil refineries along the US Gulf Coast near sites of the strategic reserves.

Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Additional reporting by Liz Hampton in Houston; Editing by Alan Crosby and Leslie Adler

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