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IEA sees no slowdown in refining capacity additions

  • Market: Crude oil, LPG, Oil products, Petrochemicals
  • 09/03/20

The IEA said today that refining capacity additions will sharply outpace product demand growth in the next five years, as consumption of road fuels stagnates.

It said global oil demand will grow by around 950,000 b/d each year in 2020-25, which would be one-third slower than growth in the last 10 years. Transport fuel markets will bear the brunt of this change, as engine efficiency improves and electric vehicles take greater market share.

The increase in demand for refined products, of around 4.4mn b/d in total over that period, will be surpassed by refiners adding 6.2mn b/d of capacity, it said. More than 70pc of those capacity additions are in countries that are already net exporters of refined products.

The IEA said the weakest growth in demand over the 2020-25 period, at just 90,000 b/d per year on average, will be for gasoline. By the end of the forecast period, improved efficiency standards and electrical vehicle uptake will curb this demand growth to just 50,000 b/d per year, it said. Demand will decline in the US, the world's largest gasoline market, and in much of the OECD, and this will be barely offset by gains in China and elsewhere.

It expects diesel demand to hardly perform better, growing on average by 110,000 b/d per year in 2020-25.

Proportionally, kerosine and jet fuel demand growth will outstrip all the other transport fuels. Demand will grow by around 90,000 b/d each year, like gasoline, but from a much lower base.

The IEA shifted upwards its demand forecast for low-sulphur fuel oil to 1.3mn b/d in 2020 and to 2.1mn b/d in 2025. Demand for the high-sulphur equivalent (HSFO) will fall by 60pc this year before stabilising. Marine gasoil (MGO) demand will rise by 490,000 b/d in 2020, but will subsequently decline by 70,000 b/d per year in 2021-24 as it gets displaced by low-sulphur fuel oil and by higher uptake of exhaust scrubbers. Around 1.1mn b/d of HSFO will be burned in vessels using scrubbers in 2025, compared with 700,000 b/d in 2020, the IEA said.

The IEA expects naphtha, LPG and ethane to contribute half of all oil demand growth in 2020-25, as consumption of plastics rises.

Capacity growth will again be concentrated in China, which is set to add 1.8mn b/d by 2025 mainly in large petrochemical-integrated projects. Notably, the abundance of light-sweet crude is reducing the need for complex refinery unit upgrades. This "fit into the picture of both supply and demand developments," the IEA said, citing weakening demand growth for both gasoline and middle distillates.

"The premium transport fuels that support refinery margins are most susceptible to replacement by alternative fuels and technologies such as electric vehicles, compressed natural gas vehicles, and LNG-fuelled trucks" it said.


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30/12/24

Viewpoint: US LPG exports to LatAm poised to grow

Viewpoint: US LPG exports to LatAm poised to grow

Houston, 30 December (Argus) — US LPG exports to Latin America are expected to rise in 2025 because of ongoing efforts by governments to transition low-income residences away from cooking with firewood. The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates in 2023 more than 70mn consumers across Latin America lacked access to clean cooking fuel. Industry groups promote the use of LPG as an alternative to firewood owing it its lower emissions and ease of transport into remote regions unable to be served by electricity or natural gas. Much of the LPG consumed in Latin America is imported from the US, and US exports to the region stood at around 10.6mn metric tonnes (t) from January to mid-December 2024, already surpassing the 10.48mn t shipped from the US in 2023, according to data from commodity tracking firm Vortexa. The largest demand center for US LPG in Latin America was Mexico, accounting for 35pc of US shipments to the region, down by 2.2 percentage points from 2023. The Dominican Republic accounted for 12pc of shipments, Ecuador 11pc, and Chile took 9pc. Brazil was among countries seeing the largest increase in its share of US LPG supplies, rising by 2.6 percentage points to 8.7pc this year. The Brazilian government is working to expand subsidies for LPG, also known as cooking fuel, by another 20mn low-income households next year. If the bill is passed, the measure could increase Brazil's LPG consumption from 7.6mn t to 7.7mn t next year. An estimated 5.4mn households currently benefit from the existing LPG subsidy program. LPG restrictions in Brazil — which limit the use of LPG in saunas, pool heating, commercial boilers, and as autogas in vehicles — may soon change, under a measure under consideration by Brazil's hydrocarbons regulator, ANP . Brazilian LPG association Sindigas expects a 5pc boost to LPG demand in the next five years if restrictions on commercial uses are lifted. The prospect of additional LPG demand in Brazil has already spurred investments in new infrastructure, including two new import and distribution terminals. Brazilian LPG distributor Copa Energia is part of a consortium of companies investing in a new 71,000t LPG storage facility in Suape on the country's northeast coast. Brazilian fuel distributor Ultrapar has also applied to antitrust regulators to build a new LPG terminal in Pecem port, in northeastern Ceara state, with 62,000t of storage, tentatively planned for operations in 2028. In Colombia, LPG import are also forecast to grow, largely due to its own diminishing production at Ecopetrol's Cusiana and Cupiagua fields. Colombia's LPG imports are forecast to increase to an average of 22,000 t/month in 2025, based on demand growth of 0.6pc per year, up from the average 6,900 t/month imported in January-June, Gasnova president Alejandro Martinez told Argus earlier this year. Colombia, like neighboring Brazil, is gearing up to accommodate growing demand. LPG distributor Colgas has started building a terminal at the existing 16,000 t/month Okianus port in Cartagena, scheduled to be ready in late 2025. Canadian oil company Frontera and Chilean LPG supplier Gasco plan to build a $50mn-$60mn LPG terminal at the Caribbean port of Puerto Bahia, which will include 20,400t of storage capacity and will be able to offload two very large gas carriers (VLGCs) a month. In Guatemala, Mexico's Grupo Tomza subsidiary Tropigas opened a new 1.3mn USG (31,000 bl) LPG storage and distribution facility in Escuintla in November to accommodate growing demand in the region and mitigate logistical disruptions. The Planta Palin facility in Escuintla comprises 20 storage tanks for propane and butane, and will be supplied from seaborne shipments arriving at Guatemala's Santo Tomas and Honduras' Omoa ports. Latin American LPG importers may also benefit from expanding dock capacity in the US. Both Enterprise and Energy Transfer projects are expected to add a combined 550,000 b/d of LPG export capacity out of Houston and Nederland, Texas, by the end of 2026. Enterprise's new Neches River terminal project near Beaumont, Texas, will add another 360,000 b/d of either ethane or propane export capacity. The US projects will ease tight dock capacity and the premiums for spot cargoes of propane and butane at the US Gulf coast are expected to wane by the end of 2025, incentivizing buyers in Latin America to purchase more US sourced LPG supplies. The curve ball Yet US LPG exports to Latin America could be stymied by growing supplies from Argentina, home to the prolific Vaca Muerta shale formation that holds an estimated 308 trillion cf of shale gas. Natural gas production in Argentina increased to 138mn m³/d in October, up from 130mn m³/d a year earlier, according to the latest Argentinian government data. Argentina exported 591,000t of LPG from January to mid-December, with nearly 85pc of it routed to Brazil. But Argentina also exports LPG to Brazil by tanker truck, which could also weigh on seaborne arrivals. By Giovann Rosales Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Viewpoint: European BD to face tighter supply in 2025


30/12/24
News
30/12/24

Viewpoint: European BD to face tighter supply in 2025

Houston, 30 December (Argus) — European butadiene (BD) supply is expected to tighten next year, according to market participants, because of scheduled steam-cracker closures and steady demand. European domestic demand this year helped spot prices maintain a 5-7pc premium to the monthly contract price (MCP) until December, when spot prices fell to parity with the MCP. But the lower BD MCP in December protected Europe's position as the lowest cost region after three consecutive price rollovers, even as US and Asian prices fell. Market sentiment is cautiously optimistic on consumer demand for early 2025. One producer noted that interest for spot volumes remains strong into early next year and export sales should remain resilient, especially once buying interest picks up after the Lunar New Year. European BD exports — which primarily flow to the Asia-Pacific region with one-offs to the US— were stable at nearly one shipment per month from April-December, although they were down from the prior year. Europe's BD exports totaled about 109,700 metric tonnes (t) so far this year, but there are ongoing discussions for one additional long-haul shipment loading in late December. That said, the spread between Europe and the US is forecast to remain closer to parity, narrowing the premium European sellers have obtained from moving shipments eastward. Both planned and unplanned cracker turnarounds in the US may raise prices there and open space for Europe's coastal producers to periodically capture preferred access to Asian buyers, independent of logistical bottlenecks. Currency, crackers may pressure demand Currency fluctuations may dent buyers' confidence in the coming year as a stronger US dollar lifts costs for imports, affecting selling prices of European-origin exports in dollar terms. The outcome of the US presidential election rallied the dollar against the euro and other currencies, as markets price in expected tariffs from the new US administration. The comparative strength of the US economy also drove the rally. Strong European domestic demand could undercut potential BD exports as the region's supplies gradually transition from net-long to more balanced, with ongoing structural changes transforming Europe's chemical business. The closure this year of two steam crackers in France and the Netherlands along with the planned shut down of two more crackers in Italy will reduce regional supply of crude C4, a key BD feedstock. Buyers in Italy will need to rely more heavily on Mediterranean imports of crude C4 in tandem with BD to maintain derivative operations. Cracker operators next year are likely to keep throughput curbed while running lighter feedslates, limiting availability of additional volumes of crude C4 and BD. Rail logistical constraints will linger into 2025 with at least three BD consumers depending more on this mode of transportation. The European market could see additional restructuring next year, with at least one producer weighing a review of its asset portfolio. Market participants also are watchful for announcements of unexpected closures. BD producers in the region are also concerned about price volatility for natural gas, citing weaker margins. Dutch TTF on a day-ahead basis averaged €44.66/MWh month-to-date in December, rising by 27pc from the same period a year earlier at €35.24/MWh. Dutch TTF on a day-ahead basis reached a year-to-date peak on 21 November at €48.58/MWh. Higher natural gas prices are partially due to continued complications in gas transport and supply and to accelerated storage withdrawals. By Joshua Himelfarb Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Viewpoint: Braskem eyes Brazil rebound


30/12/24
News
30/12/24

Viewpoint: Braskem eyes Brazil rebound

Sao Paulo, 30 December (Argus) — Major petrochemical producer Braskem aims to recover market share in Brazil in 2025, aided by higher tariffs and new duties on imports, after nearly two years of losses. Braskem posted $935mn of losses last year, with additional losses of $440mn spread across the first three quarters of 2024. Looking ahead to 2025, Braskem expects to increase its domestic share of polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) markets in Brazil, in part through higher import tariffs. Brazil raised tariffs on imported polymers to 20pc from 12.6pc effective on 15 October. That has already benefited the company, with sales in the fourth quarter expected to increase by $30mn from the previous quarter, Braskem said in November. Additionally, with fewer imports, Braskem's operating rates for plastic resins are expected to rise in the first quarter from around 64pc during the seasonally weak fourth quarter. In addition to the higher tariffs, Braskem is asking Brazil to apply anti-dumping duties on US- and Canada-produced PE. This could reduce the amount of this material coming into Brazil, which has surged in recent years. The case is being investigated. Braskem has requested duties on PE imports of 21.4pc from the US and 26.9pc from Canada. This would mean a 20pc import tax, plus a 21.4pc provisional dumping duty, totaling a 41.4pc tax on materials purchased from the US, and 46.9pc on Canadian PE. To put the numbers in perspective, Brazil imported 1.82mn metric tonnes (t) of PE in January-November, a 45pc increase from the same period a year before. Of the total figure, 77pc was bought from the US and Canada. Brazil's PE imports in November alone fell to 106,200t, 39pc lower than October and the lowest this year, showing the initial impact of the higher import duties. Still, November PE imports were up by 6pc from the same month in 2023 despite the 20pc import duty as well as the US dollar's appreciation to the Brazilian real since October. The Argentina case Braskem has looked to neighboring Argentina to recapture part of the sales lost to imports in Brazil during the year. Braskem's PE sales to Argentina have increased monthly through October, when the company became the largest PE exporter to Argentina. Argentina PE imports in October increased by 39pc from the same month in 2023, reaching 24,300t, a boost attributed to the reduction in the country's import duty to 7.5pc from 12.6pc in September. Brazil sold 46pc of that total, leading the market. North America lost its first position, falling to 42pc in October from 54pc a year earlier. January-October PE imports into Argentina fell to 226,800t, down by 19pc from the same period in 2023, with North America's share at 44pc and South America — represented solely by Braskem — at 39pc. Executive reshuffle As part of its efforts to become more competitive, Braskem reshuffled its executive board, aiming to improve operational efficiency and cost management. The company's new chief executive, Roberto Ramos, stepped into his role in early December, succeeding Roberto Bischoff. Ramos previously served as Braskem's vice president from 2002-2010. Ramos almost immediately announced changes for the positions of chief financial officer, head of the olefins and polyolefins South America unit, Brazil and global industrial operations, and Mexico and US operations. At the time, Braskem said that changes in the board would not affect plans for a possible sale of infrastructure company Novonor's controlling share in Braskem, Novonor said. Braskem's sale is of extreme importance to Novonor as it plans to use any proceeds to repay R14bn ($2.34bn) in debt to creditors. Braskem is the largest producer of thermoplastic resins in the Americas and a leader in biopolymer production. Fellow conglomerate Novonor holds a 38.3pc stake in Braskem with 50.1pc of voting shares, while Brazilian state-controlled oil company Petrobras holds a 36.1pc share with 47pc of voting capital. The remaining 25.6pc is split among other shareholders. By Fred Fernandes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Viewpoint: Trump tariffs may shift crude flows to USWC


30/12/24
News
30/12/24

Viewpoint: Trump tariffs may shift crude flows to USWC

Houston, 30 December (Argus) — President-elect Donald Trump's proposed 25pc tariff on Canadian and Mexican imports could redirect key imported oil grades from the US west coast, opening avenues for displaced Latin American crudes to reappear. The tariffs, which Trump announced on 25 November, could displace about 9pc of the crude US west coast refiners import. Canadian crude flows from the newly expanded 890,000 b/d Trans Mountain pipeline system, which recently have drawn purchases in the US west coast, would force barrels to Asia-Pacific . Mexican crude sellers would divert crude to other outlets as well, like Europe or Asia-Pacific. Refiners on the US west coast increased purchases of Canadian grades after the May startup of the Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX). Cheaper prices and closer proximity to Vancouver, British Columbia, where TMX crude loads, allowed the heavy sour crudes to find favor along the US west coast. But the proposed tariffs could raise landed TMX prices, no longer making it the cheapest heavy sour option. US west coast buyers would pay a 25pc import tariff to US Customs and Border Protection on TMX crude once it has entered port. US west coast refiners received around 169,000 b/d of crude from the Vancouver area since the pipeline came on line in May, up from less than 40,000 b/d a year earlier, data analytics firm Vortexa shows. Around 60pc of Mexico's crude exports in 2024 went to the US, mostly to the US Gulf coast, according to Vortexa data. Tariffs could lead to a drop in prices to adjust to a tariffed American market or for Mexican crude going more often to other destinations such as Europe or Asia-Pacific. Spain, South Korea and India, were the second, third and fourth most common destinations for Mexican crude exports in 2024, respectively. Mexico's crude production and export infrastructure is concentrated on the country's east coast, making exports to Asia-Pacific difficult. Mexico would need to invest in building exporting infrastructure from the west coast to improve trade routes to Asia, market participants say. But Mexico's state-owned oil company Pemex plans to continue cost-cutting measures, led by recently elected President Claudia Sheinbaum, so infrastructure expansion is unlikely. Other Latin crudes could also experience a rise after being displaced by the commencement of TMX in May. Since then, heavier crudes from countries such as Colombia, Ecuador and Argentina have found more frequent routes to the US Gulf coast and Asia-Pacific. Market participants believe lighter Brazilian grades could find routes to the US west coast as TMX supply increases in China. China imported 683,000 b/d of Brazilian crudes in 2024, c ompared with 180,000 b/d of imports to the US west coast from Brazil, according to Vortexa. Sources say the tariffs are a bargaining chip by the incoming administration, and participants are skeptical they will be implemented by the Trump administration. Instead, the tariffs could exclude crude and other commodities. More than $3.3bn of goods and services cross the US-Canada border each day, according to Canada's Fall Economic Statement (FES), which notes Canada is the largest market for 36 US states. Market participants are vocally against the proposed tariffs. Tariffs on crude and refined products "will not help our industry compete, nor will they support US energy dominance and affordability for consumers," the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufactures said on 27 November . Cenovus is also trying to explain to policy makers in the incoming Trump administration how tariffs on Canada could impact the energy system in North America. But the incoming administration shows no sign of backing off the tariffs for 2025. By Rachel McGuire and João Scheller Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Viewpoint: Chancay port may increase Peru bunker demand


30/12/24
News
30/12/24

Viewpoint: Chancay port may increase Peru bunker demand

New York, 30 December (Argus) — The opening of Peru's Chancay port next year likely will boost the country's bunkering demand and drive-up competition on the Latin American Pacific coast. Able to accommodate larger ships and vessels equipped with marine exhaust scrubbers, the unveiling of the new facility — likely in the first quarter — could spur demand for very low-sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO) and high-sulphur fuel oil (HSFO). Chancay, which is owned by Chinese state-owned port operating company Cosco Shipping and Peruvian mining company Volcan, has a 17.8-meter depth, compared with a depth of 16 meters in El Callao part, which is south of Chancay near Lima, Peru. Chancay's depth allows it to receive container ships with a capacity of up to 18,000 twenty-foot equivalent units The larger vessels will likely take on around 3,000-5,000 metric tonnes of marine fuel in one port call, according to one source familiar with the Peruvian bunker market. "The port is gradually beginning to receive container vessels, RoRo, and bulk carriers," said Augusto Ganoza, who heads Chilean bunker supplier Agunsa's operations in Peru. "I anticipate an increase in bunkering demand at Chancay, particularly if vessels call at Callao first and then proceed to Chancay, which I believe will be the case for most." But bunker buying appetite in Chancay also will depend on marine fuel prices in China. El Callao VLSFO was assessed at a $85/t premium to Zhoushan, China, in November. That differential tightened from its peak earlier this year at $143/t in April. That differential could temper the expected increase in bunkering demand in Peru. Other market contacts from outside Peru said that any increase in demand stemming from Chancay's opening is unlikely to drag down activity in competing ports such as Panama, largely because of higher prices in Peru and better quality of bunker fuel available in Panama. The VLSFO November monthly average in El Callao was $656/t, which was an $89/t premium to Panama VLSFO. By Luis Gronda Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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