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- Joanne Shore
- John Hackworth
- Energy Information Administration
- NPRA Annual Meeting
- March 2005
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- “In the business world, the rearview mirror is always clearer than the
windshield.”
- Warren Buffet (1930- )
- “The trouble with our times, is that the future is not what it used to
be.”
- Paul Valery (1871-1945)
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- High Prices
- High Price Differentials
- High Margins
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- What drove crude prices up in 2004?
- What caused the light-heavy crude price differences to change in the
short run?
- What role did refinery capacity and heavy crude oil production play in
2004 light-heavy crude oil price differentials?
- Are higher refinery margins going to continue in the future and what
lies ahead for refinery capacity?
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- Tight markets: Demand outpacing supply
- Little spare crude oil production capacity
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- What drove crude prices up in 2004?
- What caused the light-heavy crude price differences to change in the
short run?
- What role did refinery capacity and heavy crude oil production play in
2004 light-heavy crude oil price differentials?
- Are higher refinery margins going to continue in the future and what
lies ahead for refinery capacity?
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- What drove crude prices up in 2004?
- What caused the light-heavy crude price differences to change in the
short run?
- What role did refinery capacity and heavy crude oil production play in
2004 light-heavy crude oil price differentials?
- Are higher refinery margins going to continue in the future and what
lies ahead for refinery capacity?
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- Overall world refining capacity limit
- Constraints on conversion capacity
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- Assumption
- Light product demand is increasing
- World refining capacity is running at maximum utilization
- Refiners desire to substitute light for heavy crude oil
- But additional light crude oil not available
- Results
- Light product stocks drop sharply
- Price for light products rise sharply
- Product price pulls crude prices up and pulls light crude up more than
heavy
- Additional heavy crude oil won’t be used
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- Did light product stocks drop
& price spike?
- Any signs that incremental heavy crude oil production was not used?
- Was world refining running at maximum utilization?
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- Sometimes world capacity compared to wrong demand
- Must look at regional refinery utilizations
- Will show that world capacity not at maximum utilization, but demand
growth is outpacing capacity growth – for the moment
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- Asian utilization increased, but “Asia” varies immensely
- China and India are big demand drivers and are adding capacity (soon enough?)
- Singapore export center utilization increased
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- Assumption
- Light product demand increasing
- Refinery conversion capacity running at maximum utilization
- Increased crude oil supply is heavy sour
- Results
- Demand for light crude oil increases
- Added heavy crude oil run without benefit of conversion
- Residual fuel oil yield increases
- Over-supply of residual fuel oil
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- U.S. Clues
- Did U.S. complex refiners increase light crude to maximize light
products
- Did they experience a residual fuel
yield penalty?
- World Clues
- Did world residual yields increase?
- Signs of a flood of residual supply?
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- Increase in crude oil price with associated product value impacts is
primary driver behind light-heavy crude oil price differentials in 2004
- U.S. data support economic choice to use more heavy crude oil as product
values shifted
- Refiners with upgrading used more heavy sour crude oil and moved to
slightly heavier crude oil mix overall
- Yet yields not affected much
- World data do not support refinery constraints with associated desire
for light crude oil theory
- Residual yields not noticeably affected
- Stocks implied no insurmountable supply of residual fuel oil
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- What drove crude prices up in 2004?
- What caused the light-heavy crude price differences to change in the
short run?
- What role did refinery capacity and heavy crude oil production play in
2004 light-heavy crude oil price differentials?
- Are higher refinery margins going to continue in the future & what
lies ahead for refinery capacity?
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- 2004 margins up – but for how long?
- Future implications for refinery capacity
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- Near Term
- Crude prices remain relatively high
- Thus, differentials & margins remain strong
- Longer Term
- Future S/D uncertainties
- Thus differential & margin
uncertainties
- Policy uncertainties – product quality & demand
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- U.S. refining likely to continue to expand
- But U.S. may also need increases in product imports
- Still, short-term financial incentives for expansion look favorable
- Continued short-term market tightness
- Product specifications may increase product import prices
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- While world is not “out of capacity”, there is a need for increases to
continue to meet growing demand
- Expansion plans are being announced
- Valid concern over timing of completed expansions versus demand growth –
both in U.S. and abroad
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- US upgrading capacity expansion
- Expanded more than in other parts of the world
- Generally done in partnership with heavy crude producers
- Still room for some more
- Asia upgrading capacity expansion
- Perhaps next major expansion area
- Required to meet growing light product demand
- Partnerships with Middle East?
- Europe upgrading capacity expansion
- Demand not growing strongly
- Demand/refinery output mismatch
- Need to destroy residual fuel (demand declining)
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- Refinery capacity’s role in 2004 price dynamics was sometimes
overstated, but new capacity is needed.
- Beware of over-simplifications that indicate crude oil-refinery
mismatches are creating serious market bottlenecks.
- Margins and differentials should favor expansion in the short run.
- Expansion needs to be sooner rather than later, with U.S. dialogue
balancing competing concerns of security, environment, and supply
availability.
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