Notes
Slide Show
Outline
1
Are Refiners Entering a
Golden Age or a Short Cycle?

  • Global Refining Strategies 2007
  • Barcelona, Spain
  • April 2007


  • Joanne Shore
  • John Hackworth
  • Energy Information Administration
2
Short-Term Cycle or Golden Age?
  • What has driven prices, margins, and light heavy price differentials to current high levels?
    • How are these three variables related?
    • What are the main drivers?

  • How long might prices, margins, & differentials stay elevated?
3
Outline
  • High Prices: Crude Oil


  • Drivers and Uncertainties Behind Margins and Differentials


  • Other Supply/Demand Factors Affecting Future Petroleum Markets
    • Energy Efficiency
    • Biofuels
    • Surge in Capacity Expansion Plans
4
The Main Factor Behind High Product Prices: Crude Oil Prices
  • Strong Demand Growth


  • Less Supply Growth


  • Different Prospects for Future than seen in 1980


5
Today: Little World Crude Oil Surplus Production Capacity
6
Today: See Typical Economic Relationship Between Little Surplus Capacity and Price
7
Prospects  for Demand Correction Different than Early 1980’s Correction
  • Fuel oil decline will not ease market pressure today as in early 1980s


  • Easy fuel efficiency gains made  in early 1980s


  • Large Asian economies account for more growth today
8
Today’s OPEC & Non-OPEC Production Requirements Different Than 1979-80
9
Limited Prospects for Non-OPEC Crude Supply Increases in Short Run
  • Fewer non-OPEC exploration prospects, field size declining


  • Most efficient companies have limited access to known reserves


  • Tar sands growth costly and slow


10
Prices Expected to Remain Relatively High in Short Term
  • Future uncertain but could stay relatively high
  • OPEC position has strengthened
  • Demand growth has moderated only slightly
  • No large surge in non-OPEC crude or other supply -- and costly
  • Only OPEC can build excess capacity
11
Drivers & Uncertainties Behind Refinery Margins and Differentials
  • Margins
    • Growing, but volatile
    • Shift in gasoline and distillate contributions
    • Refining utilization – over-emphasized factor?

  • Light-Heavy Differentials and the Importance of Crude oil Price


  • Future Considerations
12
3-2-1 Spread (Margin Indicator) Grew with Crude Price – But Not Smoothly
13
Distillate Cracks Increased More than Gasoline
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World Utilization Up, But Atlantic Basin Utilization Not Changed Much Recently
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Light-Heavy Differentials Rose Since 2000, But Will They Remain High?
16
Light-Heavy Product Price Difference Increases with Crude Oil Price
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Light-Heavy Crude Price Differential
& Crude Oil Price Move Together
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If WTI Drops from $70 to $40, Will Differential Drop by 40% ($17-$10)?
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If WTI Drops from $70 to $40, Margin Relationship Less Certain
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Bottom Line: Crude Price Important Indicator of Future Returns
  • Rising price: Increasing margins, increasing differentials
  • Declining price: Decreasing margins, decreasing differentials
  • Price settles within a high price band
    • Margins lose their boost from rising market dynamics, but may stay higher than seen in the 1990’s
    • Differentials remain high  -- even with more conversion capacity
21
Other Supply/Demand Factors Affecting Future Petroleum Markets
  • Demand
  • Distillate/Gasoline Shift
  • Energy Efficiency


  • Supply
  • Biofuels Reducing Need for Some Capacity
  • Capacity Expansions – Oversupply?


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Demand Factors Impacting Future Atlantic Basin Needs
  • Europe’s growing imbalance between distillate & gasoline


  • U.S.  continued growth in gasoline & distillate – with distillate growing more strongly


  • Potential increase in efficiency requirements (greenhouse gas, energy security, etc.)
    • Europe’s potential mandates
    • U.S potential policy change
    • Slow impacts

23
Biofuels Changing Capacity Needs
  • Europe’s biofuel interest increasing
    • Biodiesel compatible with diesel capacity shortfall
    • Ethanol in gasoline exacerbates over-supply situation


  • U.S. seeing diminishing need for new gasoline capacity
    • Increase in ethanol
    • Increase in import availability from Europe
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Refinery Capacity Poised for Major Expansions
  • Incentives resulted in capacity investment plans


  • Plans cover all areas
    • Increased throughputs
    • Increased use of low-quality heavy feedstocks
    • Increased light product yields
    • Upgrade to top quartile
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U.S. Capacity Expansions 2007 through 2011 (KB/D)
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Capacity and Complexity Increases Through Next 5 Years
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Complexity is Increasing
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Capacity and Consumption 5-Year Changes
2007 through 2011
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Not Surprising that Outlooks/Plans Vary
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Potential for Over or Under Expansion – And Does it Matter?
  • Barring calamities:
    • In the next 2-3 years, capacity will likely remain tight
    • In next 5-10 years, not likely to see utilizations drop to levels seen in early 1980’s from expansion

  • Expansion that reduces utilization several percentage points not likely to have much impact on margins


  • Regionally, the highest risk for oversupply that might impact Atlantic Basin margins is in Middle East; Atlantic Basin is not likely to over-expand


  • Decrease in residual fuel supply from bottoms upgrading not likely to be enough to push residual fuel prices much closer to crude oil price and significantly reduce differentials.  (Demand for residual fuel is declining.)


  • Rising facility construction costs and biofuels use may reduce rate of facility expansion
31
Looking Ahead: Crude Price Factor
  • Forecast: Fluctuate in band much higher than during the 1990’s (perhaps in the $60-$70 range?)
  • Margin impact:
    • Lose the boost from being in a “rising” market
    • But still may support higher margins than in the 1990’s
  • Light-Heavy differential impact:
    • Remain elevated
    • Demand for residual fuel is shrinking (e.g., bunker fuel market)
    • Even with more conversion capacity destroying residual fuel supply, residual price not likely to rise more towards crude oil
  • Uncertainty: If crude oil prices fall, margins and differentials fall
32
Looking Ahead: Other Supply/Demand Factors
  • Policies affecting biofuels and energy efficiency
    • Biofuels impact supply mix and volume
    • Ethanol use in U.S. reducing need for increased gasoline capacity, but U.S. still needs distillate capacity
    • Biodiesel in Europe may help slow growing diesel supply gap, but ethanol in Europe adds to already excess gasoline supply
    • Ultimate margin impact may be small – affecting gasoline cracks more than distillate
    • Energy efficiency improvements have slow impacts – can adjust


  • Will refinery expansion plans result in capacity oversupply?
    • Seeing U.S.  capacity plans shrink
    • Largest potential for oversupply margin impact is in the Middle East, where could dampen European margins and thus Atlantic Basin margins some
33
Short Cycle or Golden Age?