Latest market news

Indian cement producers seek coke cargo deferments

  • Market: Petroleum coke
  • 25/03/20

A nationwide lockdown in India is prompting cement producers to seek deferments on the loading of cargoes of petroleum coke, which they use as a fuel for production. These high-sulphur coke cargoes were due for loading from refineries in the US and Saudi Arabia.

India is the world's second-largest cement producer, but the majority of manufacturing units across the country closed after several Indian states announced a lockdown earlier this week until 31 March to control the spread of the coronavirus. This was followed by the federal government's order yesterday to implement a nationwide lockdown until 14 April, bringing all cement industry operations to a complete halt.

The temporary shutdown means plants will not consume any raw material, including coke. If plants restart operations in the second half of April, as planned, it may take a few weeks before operations are normalised. Some market participants also expect the lockdown to be extended further.

Indian buyers had placed fresh orders for coke cargoes with refineries in the US and Saudi Arabia over the past few weeks. Some are already reported to be on the water, although most have yet to be shipped. Companies are now asking suppliers to defer loading by at least a month. A company executive told Argus he was unable to lift imported coke from the vessels at the port since labour and transport services had been curtailed. Several ports in India have announced force majeure on their operations.

Some cement producers said they are finding ways to sell cargoes already on the water. But it is only possible if the seller can find another buyer and if the first buyer is willing to bear additional costs related to the resale process.

The sudden disruption to operations came just as the cement industry was hoping to step up sales before the start of the monsoon season in June. Indian cement demand is usually firm during the first half of each calendar year as developers of real estate and infrastructure projects try to maximise activity before the monsoon.

The shutdown means India may well be out of the seaborne coke market for at least a month. The spread of the coronavirus in the US and Saudi Arabia could also squeeze supplies, market participants said. When Indian companies resume operations, they may initially operate at a low capacity and rely on existing coke stocks and supplies from domestic refiners like Reliance Industries (RIL), Nayara Energy and IOC.

As recently as January, market participants were expecting Indian imports of coke to expand by around 30pc to 14mn t in 2020 on rising demand from existing cement producers and the addition of new Indian cement capacity. The latest developments will soften the growth forecast.

India is estimated to have imported 10.8mn t of coke in 2019, which was already a 61pc increase from a low base in 2018, according to GAC Shipping data. The rise in import demand in 2019 was the result of higher cement demand and greater internal consumption by key producer RIL, which brought more of its 10 new gasifiers on line at its Jamnagar complex.


Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News

Alabama lock to remain closed until spring


17/12/24
News
17/12/24

Alabama lock to remain closed until spring

Houston, 17 December (Argus) — The US Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) has determined that the main chamber of the Wilson Lock on the Tennessee River near Florence, Alabama, will remain closed until spring 2025 as repairs continue. The Wilson Lock, the first lock on the Tennessee River, closed on 25 September after cracks in the lock gates on both the land and river sides were discovered. The main lock was closed to prevent further damage in the main chamber, although the auxiliary chamber was kept open for navigation. The Corps had been eyeing an earlier opening date for the main chamber since the start of November. Although months of repairs have taken place, the Corps resolved to keep the main chamber closed to preserve the lock and maintain personnel safety. The Corps, in partnership with the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), is still assessing the root cause of the cracking. A second de-watering of the gate is scheduled for the first three months of 2025 to repairs. No official date has been set for the lock reopening, although some barge carriers have heard of a late April opening date. A regular 15 barge tow has endured 5-6 days of delay through the lock on average, according to carriers. The Corps' Lock Status Report on the Wilson Lock reported a nearly two-week delay for tows navigating through the lock. This has been costly for shippers by forcing them to pay delay fees. Wilson Lock is the second lock in Alabama to undergo a lengthy closure this year. Most lock and dams along the US river system are over 70 years old, likely resulting in more closures in the coming year. By Meghan Yoyotte Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

US rail group optimistic about 2025 rail demand


12/12/24
News
12/12/24

US rail group optimistic about 2025 rail demand

Washington, 12 December (Argus) — US rail volume is likely to start strong in 2025, but railroads will need to navigate changing federal policies, the Association of American Railroads (AAR) said. Volume next year hinges on a few key factors, including the resilience of consumer spending, strength in the labor market, and the trajectory of inflation and interest rates, the group said. Railroads will need to remain vigilant as these economic indicators will be critical in helping assess rail traffic and broader economic health in the months ahead, AAR said. "Strong intermodal growth and stable consumer demand offers reasons for optimism," AAR said. "But railroads and the economy alike must navigate evolving policies and potential disruptions" as the US enters 2025 under a new administration, the group said. The AAR'S optimism comes as rail traffic in November "while by no means stellar, suggests that the broader economy remains on stable footing", AAR said. US intermodal rail volume set new records in November. The increase reflected strong consumer demand following job gains that pushed increased spending, AAR said. Intermodal traffic is made up primarily of consumer goods shipped in containers between different modes of transportation, although some scrap metal and specialty agriculture products ship this way. US railroads loaded an average of 282,000 intermodal containers and trailers per week, up by 11pc from a year earlier. That was the highest weekly average for any November since AAR began tracking intermodal data in 1989. Carload traffic fell by 3.8pc compared with November 2023. Carload traffic is primarily made up of commodities. Coal was the "biggest problem", AAR said. US railroads loaded 15pc less coal last month compared with a year earlier, while year-to-date loadings were down by 14pc from the same 11 months in 2023. If coal were excluded, monthly US carload traffic in November would have notched a 10th consecutive year-on-year increase. Industrial products volume was down by 1pc from a year earlier. Manufacturing is a major driver of US carload traffic, and that sector remains sluggish, AAR said. By Abby Caplan Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

US House panel approves river infrastructure bill


06/12/24
News
06/12/24

US House panel approves river infrastructure bill

Houston, 6 December (Argus) — A US House of Representatives committee has approved a bipartisan bill that authorizes improvements to navigation channels by the Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) and maintenance and dredging of river and port infrastructure projects. The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee advanced the Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) after several months of political wrangling to integrate earlier versions of the legislation approved by the House and Senate . The bill will head to the full House next week, said committee chairman Sam Graves (R-Missouri). This would be the sixth consecutive bipartisan WRDA bill since 2014 if passed by congress. WRDA is a biennial bill that authorizes the Corps to continue working on projects to improve waterways, including port updates, flood protection and supply chain management. WRDA will also "reduce cumbersome red tape", which will allow for quicker project turnarounds, Graves said. The bill authorizes processes to streamline work, he said. The bill also adjusts the primary cost-sharing mechanism for funding for lock and dam construction and major rehabilitation projects. The US Treasury Department's general fund will pay 75pc of costs, up from 65pc, with the rest coming from the Inland Waterways Trust Fund, which is funded by a barge diesel fuel tax. By Meghan Yoyotte Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Spot USGC coke may remain tight in near term


04/12/24
News
04/12/24

Spot USGC coke may remain tight in near term

Houston, 4 December (Argus) — US Gulf coast petroleum coke prices could gain further support in the near term from narrowing heavy-light crude spreads and lower run rates at some US refineries, particularly because of higher demand for January-arrival coke. December-loading spot coke supply has been declining since early October , when sellers began to take advantage of higher bids for cargoes that would arrive in the new year compared with those arriving in November or December. Dwindling December-loading supply lent support to fob US Gulf coast 6.5pc sulphur coke prices, lifting them to $60/t fob on 27 November from $50/t on 2 October. Demand for December loadings continues to buoy prices for the high-sulphur specification, with a US Gulf coast refinery this week selling the material via tender in the low-to-mid $60s/t fob for loading in late December. Some coke producers were planning to participate in this tender. One refiner is considering delaying a December laycan to January because its output is falling behind expectations, saying that some refineries are running at reduced rates because crack spreads are not particularly strong. US retail gasoline prices fell to three-year lows this week , while crude prices have been relatively high. The Mars 3-2-1 crack spread on the US Gulf was $1.63/bl below a year earlier on 26 November. Despite this, refinery runs nationwide rose to a 13-week high of 17.1mn b/d last week from 16.6mn b/d the prior seven-day period. This level of downstream throughputs has not been seen at this time of year since 2018, according to Energy Information Administration data. A weaker yield for heavy products could explain why market participants are reporting tight supply despite refinery runs overall being seasonally strong. Heavier crudes are losing some of their price competitiveness compared with lighter, sweeter crudes, which crimps profits for products at the lower end of the barrel. The price discount for heavy Western Canadian Select crude to the Nymex calendar month light sweet crude index reached a midpoint of $3.525/bl — the lowest level so far this year — on 21 November. The Argus US Gulf coker yield — a measure of total value of products from a coker — has fallen to only $385/short ton as of the latest assessment in late November, down from $439/st in late June. And it is now even with the fob US Gulf asphalt price at $385/st, meaning there could be an incentive for refiners to sell asphalt rather than run bottoms through their coker units. The asphalt price was $5/st above the coker yield on 15 November. Further adding to the potential for thinner supply, some refiners, including PBF and Marathon , said they would reduce fourth-quarter refinery run rates from the same period last year and from July-September levels. Coker work at BP's 435,000 b/d Whiting, Indiana, refinery also stretched from late August to November, reducing supply. Some US refiners anticipate that planned refinery closures could boost margins , perhaps as early as next year. But refiner LyondellBasell, which is closing its 264,000 b/d Houston, Texas, refinery starting in January , said on 1 November it expects a "sharp decline in gasoline crack spreads" in the fourth quarter, which may continue to weigh on coke output. Some of the near-term tightness could be related to sellers' strategies, as traders still have December-loading coke to offer and have been holding back volumes in hopes of getting higher prices. By Delaney Ramirez and Lauren Masterson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more