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Colonial pipeline expects restart this week: Update 3

  • Market: Oil products
  • 10/05/21

Adds detail from Citgo.

Colonial Pipeline plans to restore service by the end of the week on the massive system that moves motor fuels from the US Gulf coast to the New York Harbor market.

The operator of the system moving up to 2.5mn b/d of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel through the US southeast and Atlantic coast said that a phased recovery from a ransomware attack that started last week should restore full service across its system this week.

"This plan is based on a number of factors with safety and compliance driving our operational decision, and the goal of substantially restoring operational service by the end of the week," the company said today.

Colonial notified shippers late 7 May that the sprawling products pipeline system shut down key systems to contain a ransomware infection. The company restored some operations yesterday at terminals and smaller branch lines moving throughout the US southeast and Atlantic coast markets. But the major trunk lines remained shut today.

Limited market impacts so far

Colonial estimates it supplies roughly 45pc of the transportation fuel consumed on the US Atlantic coast. An extended outage could curtail crude processing in the largest US refining hub and drain US Atlantic basin supplies to replace domestic fuel output. But fast-moving traders risk paying an unnecessary premium.

Fuel suppliers eyed alternative supply routes but appear to be waiting for more details on the timing for a service restoration. The disruption hit as shippers had extra time to consider loading fuel into the 5,500-mile (8,851km) pipeline network.

US Gulf coast refiners described little change to operations as the week opened, but Citgo said it reduced rates at its 425,000 b/d refinery in Lake Charles, Louisiana, in response to the outage. The US government also saw no imminent risk to supply, but it did waive some truck transportation rules to provide more flexibility in fuel deliveries in a number of states.

Other means of transport

Colonial offers the only pipeline connection stretching from the US Gulf coast to the key New York hub. Prices for space on the main gasoline line rose to the highest level in almost 15 months today. Kinder Morgan's 700,000 b/d Products (SE) Pipe Line system — formerly known as Plantation — moves fuels from Louisiana to Virginia but it was fully subscribed. The company said it has deferred non-essential maintenance on the system while Colonial responds to the outage.

Kinder Morgan's Houston Ship Terminal saw an increase in barge and vessel loadings in response to the outage, but the company declined to give specifics.

Shipping fuels between US ports requires the use of costlier, US-flagged and crewed Jones Act tankers. Rates and interest in those vessels picked up this morning. Months of low demand had led operators to store a third of the fleet legally approved to move between US ports. Operators would need time to return the vessels and their crews to service, if demanded.

Aside from Citgo, major US Gulf coast refiners mostly reported normal operations. Refiners booked vessels that appeared destined for floating storage. Marathon Petroleum continued to supply customers and was evaluating alternatives in case they were necessary from its 1.2mn b/d of refining capacity in the area, the company said. ExxonMobil also continued to operate its 1.4mn b/d of refining capacity in the area normally. Phillips 66 declined to comment, and Valero, which operates more than 1.1mn b/d of refining capacity in the region, did not return a request for comment. Chevron said its 440,000 b/d of Texas and Mississippi refining operations were unaffected by the shutdown so far. An extended outage could interfere with its supplies, depending on demand, the oil major said.

Ample gasoline, diesel stocks

The Atlantic coast ended April with slightly below-average gasoline stockpiles and above average ultra-low sulphur diesel stockpiles, according to the Energy Information Administration. New data that will become available 12 May will still predate the pipeline shutdown.

Last year's collapse in transportation fuel demand distorted comparisons to 2020, but the northern half of the Atlantic coast held higher supplies than in 2019.

The Central Atlantic region that includes the New York Harbor market reported higher-than-average gasoline stockpiles during the week ended 30 April, at 36.4mn bl, or 18pc higher than the same week of 2019. Southeastern gasoline stockpiles fell to 23.4mn bl during that week, lower by 6.4pc compared to the same week of 2019.

Distillate was similarly well supplied to the Atlantic coast, with inventories of 42.8mn bl, an increase of 15pc compared to 2019. Stockpiles were higher than 2019 levels in every subregion, including a 10pc increase to 12.3mn bl in the southeast and a 7pc increase to 21.9mn bl in the Central Atlantic.

US fuel imports also climbed in April. Up to 8.1mn bl of gasoline and blending components were booked for transatlantic options on mid-range vessels arriving in the first two weeks of May, according to fixture reports.

The US Energy Department can release up to 1mn bl of gasoline from the Northeast Gasoline Supply Reserve, which consists of 700,000 bl in the New York Harbor area, 200,000 bl near Boston, Massachusetts, and 100,000 bl in South Portland, Maine. The US Environmental Protection Agency may also waive requirements to switch to summertime fuel blends, if necessary. That transition has already begun in some markets.

Refiner relief delayed?

US refiners had begun to lift crude processing rates in April to meet rising summer demand for fuels. An extended Colonial Pipeline outage would mark the latest setback for the sector already recovering from lower pandemic demand, a busy 2020 hurricane season and a costly arctic storm in February.

But the outage could also lift a sharply depressed US Atlantic coast refining segment. Crude processing in the region has lagged all others, even as demand has shown early signs of recovery.

PBF Energy declined to comment on its 285,000 b/d of refining capacity in the region, and Delta Air Lines subsidiary Monroe Energy did not respond to questions about its 185,000 b/d refinery in Trainer, Pennsylvania. Phillips 66 did not comment on reports of a fluid catalytic cracker (FCC) outage at its 250,000 b/d Bayway refinery in Linden, New Jersey, other than to say it had no planned maintenance at the facility.

The US government largely deferred to privately-operated Colonial on the intrusion response. The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was investigating the attack and attributed it to criminal organization DarkSide.

A statement attributed to the group today said that Colonial was not specifically targeted and that the attack was not associated with any government.

"Our goal is to make money, and not creating problems for society," the statement said. "From today we introduce moderation and check each company that our partners want to encrypt to avoid social consequences in the future."


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23/12/24

Viewpoint: US tax fight next year crucial for 45Z

Viewpoint: US tax fight next year crucial for 45Z

New York, 23 December (Argus) — A Republican-controlled Congress will decide the fate next year of a federal incentive for low-carbon fuels, setting the stage for a lobbying battle that could make or break existing investment plans. The 45Z tax credit, which offers greater subsidies to fuels that produce fewer emissions, is poised to kick off in January. Biofuel output has boomed during President Joe Biden's term, driven in large part by west coast refiners retrofitting facilities to process lower-carbon fats and oils into renewable diesel. The 45Z tax credit, created by the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), was designed to extend that growth. But Republicans will soon control Washington. President-elect Donald Trump has dismissed the IRA as the "Green New Scam", and Republicans on Capitol Hill, who had no role in passing Biden's signature climate legislation, are keen to cut climate spending to offset the steep cost of extending tax cuts from Trump's first term. Biofuels support is a less likely target for repeal than other climate policies, energy lobbyists say. But Republicans have already requested input on 45Z, signaling openness to changes. Republicans plan to use the reconciliation process, which enables them to avoid a Democratic filibuster in the Senate, to extend tax breaks that are scheduled to expire in 2025. "I want to place our industry in a place to make sure that the biofuels tax credit is part of reconciliation," said Kailee Tkacz Buller, president of the National Oilseed Processors Association. But lawmakers "could punt the biofuels discussion if stakeholders aren't aligned." A decade ago, biofuel policy was a simple tug-of-war between the oil and agriculture industries. Now many refiners formerly critical of the Renewable Fuel Standard produce ethanol and advanced biofuels themselves. And the increasingly diverse biofuels industry could complicate efforts to present a united front to Congress. Farm groups worry about carbon intensity scoring hurting crop demand and have lobbied to curtail record-high feedstock imports, to the chagrin of some biorefineries. Those producers are no monolith either: Biodiesel plants often rely more on local vegetable oils, while ethanol producers insist on keeping incentives that do not discriminate by fuel type and some oil majors would back subsidizing fuels co-processed with petroleum. Add airlines into the picture, which want greater incentives for aviation fuels, and marketers frustrated by 45Z shifting subsidies away from blenders — and the threat of fractious negotiations next year becomes clear. There are options for potential compromise, according to an Argus analysis of comments submitted privately to Republicans in the House of Representatives, as well as interviews with energy lobbyists and tax experts. The industry, frustrated by the Biden administration's delays in clarifying 45Z's rules, might welcome legislative changes that limit regulatory discretion regardless of what agency guidance eventually says. And lobbyists have floated various ways to appease agriculture groups without kneecapping biorefineries reliant on imports, including adding domestic content bonuses, imposing stricter requirements for Chinese-origin used cooking oil, and giving preference to close trading partners. Granted, unanimity among lobbyists is hardly a priority for Republican tax-writers. Reaching any consensus in the restive caucus, with just a handful of votes to spare in the House, will be difficult enough. "These types of bills always come to down to what's the most you can do before you start losing enough votes to pass it," said Jeff Navin, cofounder of the clean energy advocacy firm Boundary Stone Partners and a former House and Senate staffer. "Because they can only lose a couple of votes, there's not much more beyond that." And the caucus's goal of cutting spending makes an industry-wide goal — extending the 45Z credit into the 2030s — even more challenging. "It is a hard sell to get the extension right away," said Paul Winters, director of public affairs at Clean Fuels Alliance America. Climate costs Cost concerns also make less likely a simple return to the long-running blenders credit, which offered $1/USG across the board to biomass-based diesel. The US Joint Committee on Taxation in 2022 scored the two-year blenders extension at $5.5bn, while pegging three years of 45Z at less than $3bn. An inconvenient reality for Republicans skeptical of climate change is that 45Z's throttling of subsidies based on carbon intensity makes it more budget-friendly. Lawmakers have other reasons to not ignore emissions. Policies elsewhere, including California's low-carbon fuel standard and Europe's alternative jet fuel mandates, increasingly prioritize sustainability. The US deviating from that focus federally could leave producers with contradictory incentives, making it harder to turn a profit. And companies that have already sunk funds into reducing emissions — such as ethanol producers with heavy investments in carbon capture — want their reward. Incentives with bipartisan buy-in are likely more durable over the long run too. Next time Democrats control Washington, liberals may be more willing to scrap a credit they see as padding the profits of agribusiness — but less so if they see it as helping the US decarbonize. By Cole Martin Tax credit changes 40A Blenders Tax Credit 45Z Producers Tax Credit $1/USG Up to $1/USG for road fuels and up to $1.75/USG for aviation fuels depending on carbon intensity For domestic fuel blenders For domestic fuel producers Imported fuel eligible Imported fuel not eligible Exclusively for biomass-based diesel Fuels that produce no more than 50kg CO2e/mmBTU are eligible Feedstock-agnostic Carbon intensity scoring incentivizes waste over crop feedstocks Co-processed fuels ineligible Co-processed fuels ineligible Administratively simple Requires federal guidance on how to calculate carbon intensities for different feedstocks and fuel pathways Expiring after 2024 Lasts from 2025 through 2027 Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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German heating oil demand dips, diesel stocks reduced


23/12/24
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23/12/24

German heating oil demand dips, diesel stocks reduced

Hamburg, 23 December (Argus) — Heating oil consumers in Germany are refraining from purchasing because of high inventories, while importers are lowering their diesel stocks to maintain low bio-blended reserves. Reported volumes of heating oil traded to Argus fell by nearly 35pc last week. Consumers see little need to increase their stocks that, although they have steadily declined, remain higher than the same period in 2023 at 59.6pc, Argus MDX data show. Heating oil traded at about €1.50/100l higher than the previous week, further deterring consumers from last-minute purchases ahead of the Christmas holiday. Importers are striving to keep their diesel stocks minimal until the year's end. Obligated parties will be unable to use any surplus greenhouse gas (GHG) certificates from previous years in 2025 and 2026, so importers that have already met their obligations this year are eager to avoid generating more certificates until January. As a result, demand is low for diesel imports into Germany's northern ports and to storage facilities along the Rhine river. Northern Germany experienced a significant drop in imports in December to the lowest since September, Vortexa data show. But importers and barge operators are preparing for increased import activity in early 2025 to replenish their biodiesel inventories as quickly as possible. Suppliers at the Bayernoil consortium's 215,000 b/d Vohburg-Neustadt refinery in Bavaria are experiencing low stocks, primarily as a result of heightened demand in early December when buyers were active before an increased CO2 levy and the GHG quota take effect on 1 January. By Natalie Müller Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Viewpoint: Europe’s refiners eye support from closures


23/12/24
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23/12/24

Viewpoint: Europe’s refiners eye support from closures

London, 23 December (Argus) — Another tranche of European refining capacity will close for good next year, but the reprieve for margins in the region may only be temporary. Nearly 400,000 b/d of capacity, around 3pc of Europe's total, is scheduled for permanent closure in 2025, comprising Petroineos' 150,000 b/d Grangemouth refinery in Scotland, Shell's 147,000 b/d Wesseling refinery in Germany and a third of the capacity at BP's nearby 257,000 b/d Gelsenkirchen refinery . Around 30 refineries have closed in Europe since 2000. Among the most recent was Italian firm Eni's 84,000 b/d Livorno refinery in northern Italy earlier this year. And only this month, trading firm Gunvor announced it is mothballing its small upgrading refinery in Rotterdam . The Rotterdam facility had already stopped processing crude in 2020, leaving it peculiarly exposed to the margins between intermediate feedstocks and finished fuels. The refinery has been hit by a 25pc increase in operating costs in the last four years and a squeeze on margins, the latter the result of competition from new refineries outside the region, Gunvor said. Outside Europe, the world has added more than 2.5mn b/d of crude distillation capacity in the last three years. Three brand new refineries have come on stream in the Middle East in that time — Saudi Arabia's 400,000 b/d Jizan, Kuwait's 615,000 b/d Al-Zour with Oman's 230,000 b/d Duqm refineries. More recently, Nigeria's 650,000 b/d Dangote refinery, Mexico's 340,000 b/d Olmeca refinery and Yulong Petrochemical's 400,000 b/d refinery in China's Shandong province started up, all of which are likely to ramp up throughput in 2025. Refinery closures tend to support margins for those that remain. But European refiners' costs continue to rise while demand for their products falls, which means next year's closures are unlikely to be the last. Simpler and smaller refineries are prime candidates for closure as they usually achieve weaker margins. Europe also has plenty of refineries built before 1950 that are still running. These older plants can be more at risk of accidents and breakdowns. And repairs can sometimes cost so much that they tip a refinery into the red. An ongoing concern for European refiners is the trend towards lighter and sweeter crude slates , driven by supply-side dynamics, which is resulting in higher naphtha yields at a time when demand for naphtha from Europe's petrochemical sector is under pressure from a contraction in cracking capacity. But many in the market expect the greatest pressure in 2025 will fall on those coastal refineries in Europe that were built to maximise gasoline output. If, as expected, Dangote continues to shrink Nigeria's demand for gasoline imports , these refineries will be hit hardest. Any refinery that cannot desulphurise all of its gasoline output to the 10ppm required for UK or EU usage will be under intense pressure, as west Africa is presently among the only outlets for European high-sulphur gasoline. Strike support One of the strongest supports for European refining margins in 2025 could come in the form of industrial action if new capacity cuts or closures were to be announced. Refinery workers in the region have shown willing and able in the past to organise large-scale strikes, most emphatically in France. The highest diesel refining margins Argus has ever recorded came in October 2022, when the entire French refining system was shut down by strikes. Another trend to watch out for next year is the continuing shift in the ownership structure of Europe's refining sector. The large integrated oil companies that have dominated the industry for so long have been steadily selling European refining assets to independents and trading firms. The latter are nimbler and able to cut costs more ruthlessly. And with many of them not publicly listed, they are less susceptible to pressure regarding their environmental footprints. There could be more instalments in this story in 2025. Sweden's Preem started accepting bids for its Swedish refining assets in the summer of 2024 and Russia's Lukoil is considering bids for its Burgas refinery in Bulgaria. By Benedict George Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Shell and Prax call off deal on German refinery stake


20/12/24
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20/12/24

Shell and Prax call off deal on German refinery stake

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Trump backs new deal to avoid shutdown: Update


19/12/24
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19/12/24

Trump backs new deal to avoid shutdown: Update

Adds updates throughout Washington, 19 December (Argus) — US president-elect Donald Trump is offering his support for a rewritten spending bill that would avoid a government shutdown but leave out a provision authorizing year-round 15pc ethanol gasoline (E15) sales. The bill — which Republicans rewrote today after Trump attacked an earlier bipartisan agreement — would avoid a government shutdown starting Saturday, deliver agricultural aid and provide disaster relief. Trump said the bill was a "very good deal" that would also include a two-year suspension of the "very unnecessary" ceiling on federal debt, until 30 January 2027. "All Republicans, and even the Democrats, should do what is best for our Country, and vote 'YES' for this Bill, TONIGHT!" Trump wrote in a social media post. Passing the bill would require support from Democrats, who are still reeling after Trump and his allies — including Tesla chief executive Elon Musk — upended a spending deal they had spent weeks negotiating with US House speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana). Democrats have not yet said if they would vote against the new agreement. "We are prepared to move forward with the bipartisan agreement that we thought was negotiated in good faith with House Republicans," House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-New York) said earlier today. That earlier deal would have kept the government funded through 14 March, in addition to providing a one-year extension to the farm bill, $100bn in disaster relief and $10bn in aid for farmers. The bill would also provide a waiver that would avoid a looming ban on summertime sales of E15 across much of the US. Ethanol industry officials said they would urge lawmakers to vote against any package without the E15 provision. "Pulling E15 out of the bill makes absolutely no sense and is an insult to America's farmers and renewable fuel producers," Renewable Fuels Association chief executive Geoff Cooper said. If no agreement is reached by Friday at 11:59pm ET, federal agencies would have to furlough millions of workers and curtail services, although some agencies are able to continue operations in the event of a short-term funding lapse. Air travel is unlikely to face immediate interruptions because key federal workers are considered "essential," but some work on permits, agricultural and import data, and regulations could be curtailed. The US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has funding to get through a "short-term" shutdown but could be affected by a longer shutdown, chairman Willie Phillips said. The US Department of Energy expects "no disruptions" if funding lapses for 1-5 days, according to its shutdown plan. The US Environmental Protection Agency would furlough about 90pc of its nearly 17,000 staff in the event of a shutdown, according to a plan it updated earlier this year. By Chris Knight Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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