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Crude Summit: Asian buyers eye supplies: Clarification

  • Market: Crude oil
  • 25/01/22

Clarifies the source of economic growth forecasts in paragraph 8

North American crude exports to Asia have undergone a "paradigm shift" in recent years as buyers ramp up purchases and turn to heavier grades, executives at Asia-Pacific refiners said at the Argus Americas Crude Summit in Houston, Texas.

India was importing 425,000-450,000 b/d of crude from US and Canada at the end of 2021, up from just 33,000 b/d in 2017, said Kashinath Shanbhag, head of crude oil and LNG trading at Indian refiner Nayara Energy.

Within that figure, the percentage of ultra-heavy crudes — below 25°API — has increased to 27pc of the total from 16pc in 2017, Shanbhag said. The share of light crudes has almost doubled to 67pc from 34pc, at the expense of medium grades such as US' Mars and Poseidon.

"That shows a paradigm shift in the way Indian refiners are focusing on the US Gulf coast," Shanbhag said.

Part of the increase in buying heavier grades has been to compensate for the drop in availability of Venezuelan crudes because of US sanctions, as well as lower exports from Mexico. Indian imports of ultra-heavy crude from Latin America have fallen to 350,000 b/d from around 600,000 b/d in 2017, he said. Nayara, which is majority owned by Russia's Rosneft, was one of the major buyers of Venezuelan crude before US sanctions cut flows.

Japanese refiners are also paying close attention to exports from the Americas, said Mitsuyasu Kawaguchi, general manager for crude and tankers at Japan's Cosmo Oil.

"Our company is actively buying crude from the US and Mexico, mainly medium grade Mexican Isthmus and some Latin American heavy grades," he said.

Kawaguchi also said he was "very encouraged" by the recent recovery of up to 1mn b/d per year in US shale production. "We see recent structural changes in ownership and continuous improvement in productivity, while the sector is returning more profit to investors," he said. "So these are all good signs that the shale industry seems to be growing in a more sustainable way than it used to be."

Cost concerns

Overall, Indian oil demand is poised for strong growth, with the IMF expecting the country's GDP to increase by 9.5pc this year — higher than other agencies' forecasts. Domestic demand had returned to pre-pandemic levels at the end of 2021, although Shanbhag said the emergence of the Covid-19 Omicron variant had started to affect consumption from the second half of December.

But cost remains a key focus. "One caveat to the growth story for US or Canadian exports into India is that the Indian refining system as a whole is very, very sensitive to price," Shanbhag said. For example, Indian buyers switched to medium rather than ultra-heavy grades last year in line with changes to arbitrage economics, he said.

Infrastructure investments, such as new pipelines that can bring more Canadian crude to the US Gulf coast and planned single-point mooring systems to load 2mn bl very large crude carriers (VLCCs) are important to buyers, Shanbhag said.

"All those dynamics have to work in sync to bring down logistics costs. That will be key for the growth in these barrels flowing into India," he said.

Cosmo is also paying close attention to exports from Canada's Pacific coast as pipeline expansion projects finally move ahead, Kawaguchi said.


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29/04/25

Canada’s Liberals win minority government

Canada’s Liberals win minority government

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N Sea benchmark crude loadings at 20-year low in June


29/04/25
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N Sea benchmark crude loadings at 20-year low in June

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Spanish refineries, petchems restart after power outage


29/04/25
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29/04/25

Spanish refineries, petchems restart after power outage

Madrid, 29 April (Argus) — Spanish oil companies Repsol and Moeve are restarting refineries and petrochemical plants after they were halted by a massive power cut across Spain and Portugal yesterday, 28 April. Power has returned to Repsol's five Spanish refineries, which have a combined 890,000 b/d of capacity, and its two petrochemicals plants in Tarragona and Puertollano, as well as Moeve's 464,000 b/d of refining capacity and two petrochemicals plants in southern Spain. Facilities are "restarting progressively" after power was restored from late on 28 April, according to the companies. They declined to say when they expect production to return to levels prior to the outages. A momentary and as-yet-unexplained drop in power supply on the Spanish electricity grid of over 10GW at around 12.30 CET (10:30 GMT) caused power cuts across most of Spain and Portugal yesterday, shutting down industrial complexes . The outage followed a localised and unexplained loss of power in Cartagena southern Spain on 22 April which shut down Repsol's 220,000 refinery for several days, the company confirmed. Portugal's Galp has not yet responded to requests for confirmation that its 226,000 b/d Sines refinery in southern Portugal halted yesterday, although one worker at the facility confirmed to Argus that the refinery is restarting now after a "total shutdown" following the power cut. BP said operations at its 108,000 b/d Castellon refinery in eastern Spain "have not been affected by the power outage" but the facility did "activate an emergency response plan" and is working "closely with local authorities to manage the situation." Spain's dominant oil product pipeline and storage operator Exolum, whose facilities connect refineries and ports, and deliver to service stations, said its infrastructure is working "normally" today after yesterday's disruption, adding that it managed to supply essential services and airports with fuel throughout the blackout. Repsol's 220,000 b/d Bilbao refinery, which has limited hydrocracking capacity and no major petrochemicals units, took just two days to return to prior production levels after a power outage caused a total shutdown in 2016. Any recovery to normal functioning of a plant could take longer depending on the configuration of a particular refinery, whether any damage to units occurred and whether any petrochemical units were affected. Airport operations Aena — the firm that operates 48 Spanish airports — said that all airports in its network had fully resumed operations as of Tuesday morning. Airlines including Iberia, AirEuropa and Easyjet expect all flights to operate as scheduled today. The power outage halted operations at airports in Spain, Portugal, Morocco and southern France. Morocco's National Airports Office (Onda) announced that check-in and boarding procedures have been fully restored at all airports in the country. Around 500 flights were cancelled in Spain and Portugal, according to data from aviation analytics firm Cirium, after deducting double-counted flights between the two countries. Lisbon airport was the worst hit, with 45pc of departures cancelled, as well as about 30pc of departures at Seville airport. Around 50 flights each were grounded at Madrid and Barcelona airports — Spain's busiest. By Jonathan Gleave and Amaar Khan Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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UK's Grangemouth refinery stops processing crude


29/04/25
News
29/04/25

UK's Grangemouth refinery stops processing crude

London, 29 April (Argus) — The Petroineos joint venture's 150,000 b/d Grangemouth refinery in Scotland has stopped processing crude and the company will now import transport fuels to meet demand, it said today. The move ends more than 70 years of refining at Grangemouth, and around 400 workers will lose their jobs. The closure removes 13pc of the UK's refining capacity, which will probably increase the country's reliance on imported refined products. Petroineos — a joint venture between PetroChina and UK-based Ineos — said in November 2023 it would close the refinery in spring this year, later deciding to repurpose the site to an import and distribution terminal. It said today it has invested £50mn ($67mn) in this. Petroineos rejected a call from UK labour union Unite for the refinery to be converted into a a sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) plant. London has said it would provide £200mn for investment in clean energy at the Grangemouth site, which it hoped would unlock private sector funds. Unite today said "for all the talk, nothing has been done", and said the closure was because the UK and Scottish governments "have effectively allowed China to shutdown Scotland's capacity to refine fuel". Slow death UK refinery output dropped to a 17-month low in March, reflecting Grangemouth's gradual drop in run rates ahead of processing its final barrel. The effect on national fuel balances has already been felt, with UK gasoil imports at an almost six-year high of 1.484mn t in April, and net gasoline exports the lowest on record at 65,000t, according to the country's latest submission to the Joint Organisations Data Initiative (Jodi). The Grangemouth closure is one of three major refinery shutdowns planned this year in Europe. In Germany, Shell began to close its 147,000 b/d Wesseling refinery in March , and BP plans to remove a third of the crude distillation capacity at its 257,000 b/d Gelsenkirchen site this year . This removal of 400,000 b/d of capacity represents around 3pc of Europe's total. This year's plant closures are widely expected to exacerbate a supply squeeze of middle distillates on the continent, while failing to address a growing gasoline supply overhang exacerbated by the ramp-up of production from Nigeria's 650,000 b/d Dangote refinery. Further unplanned European refinery closures are anticipated by market participants as product margins slide from post-pandemic highs and elevated overheads squeeze operating profits. By George Maher-Bonnett Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Thailand’s PTTEP posts higher 1Q oil, gas sales


29/04/25
News
29/04/25

Thailand’s PTTEP posts higher 1Q oil, gas sales

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