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US Energy Secretary: Oil prices are not high enough to destroy demand.

Despite the fact that the markets were bouncing and oil prices were near $100 a barrel due to the U.S./Israeli war against Iran, U.S. Energy Sec. Chris Wright said on Monday, at the CERAWeek conference in Houston, Texas.

After the attacks in the Middle East on energy infrastructure and the closure of an important shipping channel, the world is experiencing one of its worst energy crises. The oil prices are at multi-year highs, and fuel prices in the U.S. have surged. This could cause problems for the Republican Party of President Donald Trump ahead of the midterm elections.

The Trump administration has taken'steps to calm the markets, including releasing U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve oil in collaboration with other members of International Energy Agency. Wright said on Monday that the U.S. would release between one million and one million-and-a half barrels of oil per day, with a goal to reach three million barrels per days.

Speaking shortly after Wright's remarks, Sultan Al Jaber, CEO of Abu Dhabi state oil company ADNOC, said that the increase in oil prices was slowing the global economic growth. He also added that no country should be able?to close the Strait?of Hormuz. This chokepoint, which Iran effectively closed, accounts for around 20% of world oil consumption.

Wright, when asked if a U.S. win in Iran would mean the country no longer had control over the Strait of Hormuz, told CNBC during an interview at the conference that "we need to be in the position where they're ability to threaten the Strait of Hormuz has either been gone or dramatically diminished from where it was in the past few years, last several decades."

Wright stated that the Trump administration was prioritizing the supply of refineries in Asia, which has been the most affected by market shocks.

He said, "We want oil to reach Asian refineries as quickly as possible and with as little downturn in refining as possible." Wright said Venezuela was "significantly better" now than it had been months earlier, after the capture of Nicolas Maduro and the U.S. taking over of the OPEC nation's oil exports.

Wright, who visited Caracas in Caracas's oilfields and met with interim president Delcy Rodriquez last month, said that Venezuela will "eventually" hold elections. He did not provide any further details.

U.S. NUCLEAR POWER

Wright stated that the U.S. is on track to have three nuclear reactors of next-generation producing heat by July 4. This will be a prelude to delivering electricity into the grid.

In?the country are being developed several so-called small modules reactors and?other advanced nuclear forms, but none of them are commercially operational at the moment.

Wright said that new nuclear energy would be a crucial supplier of electrons for the U.S. electric grid, which struggles to meet the demand of data centers and electrification in industries such as transportation. Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw, Marianna Pararaga, Nathan Crooks, and Laila K. Kearney from Houston, and Timothy Gardner from Washington, D.C.

(source: Reuters)