Limited refining capacity and low product inventories have created a volatile global refining market where minor outages can spike fuel prices, Gunvor's head of research said today at the CERAWeek by S&P Global conference in Houston, Texas.
"When you look at the product market, as opposed to crude, you see that we have absolutely no buffer in terms of inventories," Gunvor's Frederic Lasserre said. "It's a just-in-time business."
In the US, weak pandemic-era margins contributed to the permanent closure of about 1mn b/d of capacity and a tighter system for the supply of refined products as demand recovered to pre-pandemic levels.
Even minor unexpected outages can now spike refined products prices, Lasserre said. "We have no buffer and no excess capacity in the refining complex anymore."
Major refining capacity start-ups this year, such as Nigeria's 650,000 b/d Dangote refinery and Mexico's 340,000 b/d Olmeca plant on the Gulf of Mexico, are also slated to ramp-up slowly and provide limited relief to a tight global refining system in the short term.