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EIA reports that U.S. crude imports dropped last week, reaching their lowest level since February 2021.

EIA reports that U.S. crude imports dropped last week, reaching their lowest level since February 2021.
EIA reports that U.S. crude imports dropped last week, reaching their lowest level since February 2021.

The Energy Information Administration reported that the U.S. imported its lowest amount of crude oil in five years last week, as companies sought to avoid a heavy tax at the end of the year on oil stored in storage.

According to EIA, U.S. crude imports fell last week to 4,95 million barrels a day. This is the lowest level since February 2021.

John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital, explained that the?ad value tax was a burden on crude oil imports.

Kilduff stated that "companies" will delay taking inventory of crude oil and refined products when they reach this point, especially in December.

EIA data revealed that the U.S. crude inventory has increased due to lower imports, and robust refining activities.

EIA data shows that oil imports from Mexico dropped to 71,000 bpd during the week ending December 26, the lowest ever recorded.

This was lower than the previous all-time high for U.S. crude imports from Mexico, which reached 131,000 bpd during the week ending Nov. 28th 2025.

The Mexican state oil company, Pemex, must maintain its production at 1.6 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil and condensate. This is a sharp drop from the 3.4 millions bpd that it produced 20 years ago. Reporting by Arathy S. Somasekhar in Houston and Georgina M. McCartney; editing by Chizu N. Nomiyama

(source: Reuters)