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California refinery conversions face skepticism

  • Market: Biofuels, Crude oil, Emissions, Oil products
  • 09/08/21

Wariness of petroleum refinery conversions to produce renewable fuels could complicate California's low-carbon transportation goals.

Skepticism about biofuel's environmental benefits and growing attention to the pollution endured by communities closest to such facilities will challenge Phillips 66 and Marathon Petroleum plans to establish some of the largest renewable diesel plants in the world.

The companies say they remain confident about their projects. But regulators warn that permitting challenges could frustrate California's efforts to transform its transportation fuel mix.

"I think there is a higher bar to meet than what it would have been in the past," said John Gioida, one of five Contra Costa County supervisors who will decide whether to grant final permits for the projects likely next year.

"Communities in the shadow of industry have had to bear an undue burden," Gioida said. "And we owe it to them to reduce that burden, even as part of permitting these projects."

Phillips 66 and Marathon Petroleum plan to wind down decades of petroleum fuel production at their Contra Costa County refineries and shift production to renewable fuels.

Contra Costa County planning officials expect to issue by early September draft environmental impact reports analyzing Phillips 66 and Marathon Petroleum's proposals. The county will take public comment for up to 60 days and must then respond before county supervisors consider approving them, potentially in the first quarter of 2022.

Marathon halted crude processing and converted its 166,000 b/d Martinez refinery to terminal operations last year. The company is targeting 14,000 b/d of renewable diesel production in the second half of next year with an ultimate capacity of 48,000 b/d.

Phillips 66 reached 8,000 b/d of renewable diesel output in July at its 120,000 b/d Rodeo refinery. The company plans more than 50,000 b/d of biofuels capacity when it ceases crude refining there in 2024.

Renewable diesel offers an immediate reduction in greenhouse gas emissions for medium- and heavy-duty vehicles. California anticipates these vehicles will need liquid fuels for decades, even as the state pursues aggressive electrification goals for its transit and light-duty vehicle fleet.

Renewable diesel faces no limits on blending and can move in existing pipelines, terminals and fuel systems. Its production gives refiners credits needed to comply with federal biofuel and California low-carbon fuel mandates.

Renewable diesel made up more than a third of credits generated to meet the state's low-carbon fuel requirements in the first quarter of 2021. Conversions shut refining units and reduce site emissions. Yet the projects raise concerns about the environmental consequences of supplying such massive renewable diesel projects.

Smaller conversions under construction today in nearly every region of the US would expand renewable diesel production to more than 200,000 b/d in 2024, up fivefold from about 40,000 b/d in 2020. Most of these sites will use at least some soybean oil as feedstock.

Oilseed crushing capacity limits the supplies of these feedstocks. But such demand can entice farmers to expand cropland, groups warn.

"These conversions are very much happening in gold-rush mode," said Ann Alexander, a senior attorney with the National Resource Defense Council monitoring the California proposals. "You have state officials largely taking positions that are just uncritically supportive."

Advocates from coast to coast this year have protested the continued use of liquid fuels as extending the burden faced by communities already blanketed by emissions from tailpipes or refinery flares. Converted plants may emit less, but they also can extend the life of a facility for years.

President Joe Biden has given new momentum to a movement broadly labeled as "environmental justice," specifically referencing it while promoting new national electric vehicle and fuel efficiency goals with the support of US automakers and union workers.

"There is no going back," Biden said of the transition to electric.

Members of the California Air Resources Board's (ARB) Environmental Justice Advisory Committee this month expressed frustration with the state's plan for meeting sweeping carbon reductions goal.

Kevin Hamilton, a committee member and co-director of the Central California Asthma Collaborative, voiced concern that the state was unwilling to go further to cut emissions. "There is this sort of inherent need to support as much of this existing infrastructure as can survive without dramatically impacting it in ways that could in fact disrupt it and maybe even eliminate it in California," Hamilton said in a recent committee meeting.

Rejecting alternative liquid fuels risks leaving the state short of tools to meet its low carbon goals, regulators warn. Biofuels cut the state's emissions by 17mn metric tonnes in 2019, according to the board. California's aggressive pursuit of light-duty electric vehicle infrastructure has not kept pace with state targets. And the heavy-duty vehicle fleet faces more significant obstacles to conversion. The state anticipates heavy vehicles will need liquid fuels into the 2040s.

"We can set ambitious targets," ARB deputy executive officer for climate change and research Rajinder Sahota said during a summer workshop. "But if, during implementation, we are putting up hurdles through permitting processes or other kinds of processes that need to happen before you can break ground and actually have that production happen, then we are not actually going to realize those reductions and benefits that we anticipate."

There are other, local reasons to favor transition, supervisor Gioida said. Gioida's district includes Richmond, where Chevron operates a 250,000 b/d petroleum refinery. Gioida served on the ARB board from 2013-2020 and has served on the Bay Area Air Quality Management District Board since 2006.

Last year's shutdown of Marathon's Martinez refinery ended hundreds of union jobs. Losing the refineries mean reducing the local tax base. And in-state production must meet California's tough in-state standards. Planners must take care to ensure communities that have shouldered the greatest pollution burden see greater benefits from carbon reduction, Gioida said.

"There clearly is sentiment in the community to shift production elsewhere," Gioida said. "But I think also there is sentiment in communities to benefit from any new projects."

Refiners must prove the benefits of not cutting straight to zero.

California liquid renewables demand ’000 b/d

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26/12/24

Viewpoint: US tariffs may push more Canadian crude east

Viewpoint: US tariffs may push more Canadian crude east

Singapore, 26 December (Argus) — Canada may divert crude supplies from the US to Asia-Pacific via the Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX) pipeline in 2025, should president-elect Donald Trump impose tariffs on Canadian imports. Trump has declared that he will implement a 25pc tax on all imports originating from Canada after he is sworn into office on 20 January. This will effectively add around $16/bl to the cost of sending Canadian crude to the US, based on current prices, and impel US refiners to cut their purchases. The US imported 4.57mn b/d of Canadian crude in September, according to data from the EIA. Canadian crude producers are expected to turn to Asian refiners in their search for new export outlets. This is especially after Asian refiners gained easier access to such cargoes following the start-up of the 590,000 b/d TMX pipeline in May. The new route significantly shortens the journey to ship crude from Canada to Asia. It takes about 17 days for a voyage from Vancouver to China, compared with 54 days from the US Gulf coast to the same destination. China has become the main outlet for Asia-bound shipments from Vancouver, accounting for about 87pc of the 200,000 b/d exported over June-November, according to data from oil analytics firms Vortexa and Kpler (see chart). But even if the full capacity of the TMX pipeline is utilised to export crude to Asia from Vancouver, it will still only represent a fraction of current Canadian crude exports to the US. Vancouver sent just 154,000 b/d via the TMX pipeline to US west coast refiners over June-November, Vortexa and Kpler data show. Meanwhile, latest EIA figures show more than 2.63mn b/d of Canadian crude was piped into the US midcontinent in September, while US Gulf coast refiners imported 469,000 b/d. This means Canadian crude prices will likely come under downward pressure from higher costs for its key US market, should Trump's proposed tariffs come to pass. This will further incentivise additional buying from Chinese customers, as well as other refiners based elsewhere in Asia-Pacific. India, South Korea, Japan, and Brunei have already imported small volumes of Canadian TMX crude in 2024. A question of acidity But other Asian refiners have so far been reluctant to step up their heavy sour TMX crude imports because of concerns over the high acidity content. China has been mainly taking Access Western Blend (AWB), which has a total acid number (TAN) as high as 1.6mg KOH/g. Acid from high-TAN crude collects in the residue at the bottom of refinery distillation columns where it can corrode units, which deters many refineries from processing such grades. But Chinese refiners have been able to dilute the acidity level by blending their AWB cargoes with light sweet Russian ESPO Blend, allowing them to save costs compared to buying medium sour crude from the Mideast Gulf. Cold Lake, the other grade coming out of the TMX pipeline, has a lower TAN and is currently popular with refiners on the US west coast. But higher costs from potential tariffs could prompt Cold Lake exports to be redirected from the US to buyers in South Korea, Japan, and Brunei — which had all bought the grade previously. Canadian crude appears to have so far displaced medium sour grades in Asia-Pacific, and this trend is expected to continue should TMX crude flows to the region climb higher in 2025. More Canadian crude heading to Asia may displace and free up more Mideast Gulf medium sour supplies to buyers in other regions, including US refiners looking for replacements to their Canadian crude imports. This will also limit the flows of other arbitrage grades like US medium sour Mars crude to Asia-Pacific, which has already seen exports to Asia dwindle in 2024. Opec+ is also due to begin unwinding voluntary production cuts in April 2025, which means Canadian producers will likely have to lower prices sufficiently to attract buyers from further afield. By Fabian Ng TMX exports from Vancouver (b/d) Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Viewpoint: California dairy fight spills into 2025


24/12/24
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24/12/24

Viewpoint: California dairy fight spills into 2025

Houston, 24 December (Argus) — California must begin crafting dairy methane limits next year as pressure grows for regulators to change course. The California Air Resources Board (CARB) has committed to begin crafting regulations that could mandate the reduction of dairy methane as it locked in incentives for harvesting gas to fuel vehicles in the state. The combination has frustrated environmental groups and other opponents of a methane capture strategy they accuse of collateral damage. Now, tough new targets pitched to help balance the program's incentives could become the fall-out in a new lawsuit. State regulators have repeatedly said that the Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) is ill-suited to consider mostly off-road emissions from a sector that could pack up and move to another state to escape regulation. California's LCFS requires yearly reductions of transportation fuel carbon intensity. Higher-carbon fuels that exceed the annual limits incur deficits that suppliers must offset with credits generated from the distribution to the state of approved, lower-carbon alternatives. Regulators extended participation in the program to dairy methane in 2017. Dairies may register to use manure digesters to capture methane that suppliers may process into pipeline-quality natural gas. This gas may then be attributed to compressed natural gas vehicles in California, so long as participants can show a path for approved supplies between the dairy and the customer. California only issues credits for methane cuts beyond other existing requirements. Regulators began mandating methane reductions from landfills more than a decade ago and in 2016 set similar requirements for wastewater treatment plants. But while lawmakers set a goal for in-state dairies to reduce methane emissions by 40pc from 2030 levels, regulators could not even consider rulemakings mandating such reductions until 2024. CARB made no move to directly regulate those emissions at their first opportunity, as staff grappled with amendments to the agency's LCFS and cap-and-trade programs. That has meant that dairies continue to receive credit for all of the methane they capture, generating deep, carbon-reducing scores under the LCFS and outsized credit production relative to the fuel they replace. Dairy methane harvesting generated 16pc of all new credits generated in 2023, compared with biodiesel's 6pc. Dairy methane replaced just 38pc of the diesel equivalent gallons that biodiesel did over the same period. The incentive has exasperated environmental and community groups, who see LCFS credits as encouraging larger operations with more consequences for local air and water quality. Dairies warn that costly methane capture systems could not be affordable otherwise. Adding to the expense of operating in California would cause more operations to leave the state. California dairies make up about two thirds of suppliers registered under the program. Dairy supporters successfully delayed proposed legislative requirements in 2023. CARB staff in May 2024 declined a petition seeking a faster approach to dairy regulation . Staff committed to take up a rulemaking considering the best way to address dairy methane reduction in 2025. Before that, final revisions to the LCFS approved in November included guarantees for dairy methane crediting. Projects that break ground by the end of this decade would remain eligible for up to 30 years of LCFS credit generation, compared with just 10 years for projects after 2029. Limits on the scope of book-and-claim participation for out-of-state projects would wait until well into the next decade. Staff said it was necessary to ensure continued investment in methane reduction. The inclusion immediately frustrated critics of the renewable natural gas policy, including board member Diane Tarkvarian, who sought to have the changes struck and was one of two votes ultimately against the LCFS revisions. Environmental groups have now sued , invoking violations that effectively froze the LCFS for years of court review. Regulators and lawmakers working to transition the state to cleaner air and lower-emissions vehicles will have to tread carefully in 2025. By Elliott Blackburn Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Viewpoint: US Gulf high-octane component prices to rise


24/12/24
News
24/12/24

Viewpoint: US Gulf high-octane component prices to rise

Houston, 24 December (Argus) — Cash prices of high-octane gasoline blending components in the US Gulf coast are likely to rise in 2025 after a year of declines as lower refining capacity starts to thin stocks. Alkylate and reformate cash prices and differentials have been lower over the course of 2024, in part from weaker refining margins. The lower margins are reflected in the region's crack spreads, which narrowed to $12.94/USG on 19 December from $18.67/USG a year earlier, as abundant supply in the region met weak demand . Inventories in the region have also been lower over the course of the year. Stocks in the region fell in November by 2pc from a year earlier to an average 29.75mn bl. US Gulf coast crack spreads have been declining steadily since 2022, according to the Energy Information Administration's (EIA) November Short-Term Energy Outlook, brought on by lower overall product demand, especially for gasolin e . But the EIA expects spreads to hold steady next year, even with a decrease in refining capacity, potentially supporting prices for high-octane components. The upcoming year will also bring a significant refinery closure to the region, which should reduce production and raise cash prices of components such as alkylate and reformate. LyondellBasell's closure of its 264,000 b/d Houston, Texas, refinery is scheduled to start in January. The refinery's fluid catalytic cracking unit (FCC), which converts vacuum gasoil primarily into gasoline blendstocks, is expected to be shut in February, followed by a complete end to crude refining by the end of the first quarter. US total refining capacity should fall to 17.9mn b/d by the end of 2025, according to the EIA, 400,000 b/d less than at the end of 2024, with the lower production leading to price increases. Although the LyondellBasell closing should eventually give crack spreads in the region a boost, some in the industry do not expect a return to pre-pandemic levels of refining margins in the immediate future. CVR Energy chief executive David Lamp said in November the company needed "to see additional refining capacity rationalization in both the US and globally" for crack spreads to gain ground. An increase in consumer demand for gasoline would also support a rise in cash prices and differentials for high-octane components. But the EIA in December forecast consumption nationwide would rise in 2025 by only 10,000 b/d, or 0.1pc, to 8.95mn b/d. By Jason Metko Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Viewpoint: Ethanol producers face higher costs in 2025


24/12/24
News
24/12/24

Viewpoint: Ethanol producers face higher costs in 2025

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Viewpoint: European HSFO supply to stay short


24/12/24
News
24/12/24

Viewpoint: European HSFO supply to stay short

London, 24 December (Argus) — A sustained reduction in global supply should keep European higher-sulphur fuel oil (HSFO) prices and margins elevated in 2025. European HSFO differentials against the front-month Ice Brent crude futures contract briefly moved to a premium in October 2024, when a fall in production coincided with strengthening demand for high-sulphur marine fuel. A fire at a crude distillation unit in September severely cut output at Motor Oil Hellas' 180,000 b/d Corinth refinery in Greece, a key HSFO bunker producer in the Mediterranean region. The possibility of sudden drops in output at refineries will underpin HSFO margins in 2025, assuming Europe maintains its ban on imports of Russian oil products. Europe imported sour fuel oil from a variety of other countries in 2024 — Iraq emerged as the largest single supplier of high-sulphur residual product, according to Kpler , accounting for about a third of the region's 5.7mn t of imports. Europe's HSFO stocks will come under indirect pressure next year from falling fuel oil output in Russia. Additional upgrading capacity at Russian refineries means output from the world's top fuel oil supplier has been dropping year-on-year. Vortexa data show nearly 37mn t of Russian fuel oil has arrived at non-Russian ports this year, 12pc lower than in 2023. Although Europe cannot take any of this, the fall means less to go around globally and this has a knock-on effect on European supply. If middle-distillate crack spreads stay relatively lacklustre in 2025, appetite for higher-sulphur straight run feedstocks will probably be subdued. This could allow for excess sour fuel oil to find its way into the marine fuels market, where demand for HSFO has been strong. Tankers opting to avoid the risk of being attacked by Yemen-based Houthi militants in the Red Sea are adding weeks to their journey times, and have been looking to HSFO rather than very-low sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO) to keep their bunker costs down. If longer shipping routes remain popular in 2025, demand for HSFO should stay strong. The Emissions Control Area (ECA) that will cover the Mediterranean Sea from 1 May 2025 could dampen buying interest for 3.5pc sulphur marine fuels. A sulphur scrubber can undergo more wear and tear if it is made to reduce a vessel's HSFO emission level to 0.1pc, in line with the ECA, rather than to the current limit of 0.5pc. This increases rates at which the scrubber needs to be replaced, making it uneconomical to install one. Mid-range sulphur fuel oils are now garnering interest from Mediterranean-based bunker buyers as a workaround. LSSR As the ECA comes into force, demand for the sweetest grades of low-sulphur straight-run (LSSR) fuel oil is likely to intensify from those who buy marine fuels for vessels not fitted with scrubbers. Demand for 0.1-0.2pc sulphur straight-run fuel oil has been high in 2024, reinforcing competition between blenders and refiners for Algerian LSSR. Exports of Algerian LSSR were 1.28mn t in the year to 20 December 2024, lower by 38pc from year-earlier levels and by 65pc from the same period in 2022, but global supply was somewhat balanced by output from Nigeria's new 650,000 b/d Dangote refinery. It exported 870,000t of LSSR in 2024, of a reportedly similar grade to the Algerian product according to data from Vortexa. Most Nigerian cargoes exported in 2024 were used for blending, according to information gathered by Argus . LSSR export availability from Dangote will depend on the refinery's ability to run feedstocks through residue fluid catalytic cracking units for gasoline production. Potentially adding to west African LSSR, at the start of December Nigeria's 210,000 b/d Port Harcourt refinery sold its first cargo since its long-awaited restart on 27 November. Port Harcourt's LSSR contains 0.26pc sulphur, according to Kpler. By Bob Wigin and Isabella Reimi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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