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Europe is running low on diesel when it needs it most

  • Market: Oil products
  • 17/10/22

Europe's tanks are running low on diesel, making the market vulnerable to wild price volatility, with sanctions against Russia threatening to deliver the biggest supply shock in living memory in less than four months.

Independent gasoil inventories in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) region fell by 10pc in one week in early October. That undid a brief recovery in the region's stocks, compounding a 43pc decline in total Dutch diesel inventories in the year to July 2022. They were 33pc lower in July than in the same month of 2019. These statistics show the problem most starkly because ARA has outsized oil storage capacity, but the trend is the same everywhere.

Germany had 10pc less diesel inventories in July than a year earlier and 7pc less than in the same month of 2019. The UK had 12pc less than a year earlier and 30pc less than in 2019. Overall middle distillate inventories in the 16 major European countries surveyed by Euroilstock were 11pc lower in September year on year and 13pc lower than in 2019. That figure includes kerosine, but mostly reflects diesel and gasoil.

These volumes never get near zero, because of day to day operational needs. But the layer of discretionary inventories on top has been disappearing.

This has been a key cause of high and volatile diesel prices. Without inventories, buyers cannot be flexible. They need to secure supply on a tight schedule to be sure of fulfilling their own contracts for onward sale. When prompt prices rise because of a supply disruption, buyers cannot wait for it to pass and pay whatever it takes.

Traders said there is no incentive for most participants to build or even maintain these discretionary inventories, because of the enormous cost of doing so in such a steeply backwardated market. Backwardation — meaning prompt prices above those for later delivery — signals fundamental pressures on the market. For the past year, the backwardation has reflected the great cost and difficulty of refining diesel. The most efficient way to meet marginal demand has been to draw on inventories instead.

Spiking natural gas prices in autumn 2021 created moderately steep backwardation because they raised refiners' energy costs and the cost of the hydrogen input to some key diesel production processes. Gas prices have soared in recent months. Emissions allowances have grown much more expensive for European refiners at the same time. And as gasoline became oversupplied in Europe in the summer, diesel buyers had to compensate refiners for the losses they were making on other products as they raised crude runs. This dynamic is likely to re-emerge over the winter.

Available refining capacity has shrunk. A wave of wholesale decommissioning and conversion to bioprocessing during the pandemic was followed by fires, explosions and malfunctions this year as refiners tried to maximise middle distillate output under heatwave conditions. Most recently, French strikes have immobilised more than 5pc of Europe's refining capacity for four weeks.

The inventory crunch is not universal. Some firms are known to be stockpiling, in spite of the high financial cost, because they perceive such a severe risk of supply disruption in the coming months. The two German refineries supplied with Russian crude through the northern leg of the Druzhba pipeline are examples of this.

At the national level, European policymakers have dipped into strategic reserves several times already this year. The International Energy Agency (IEA) co-ordinated a multinational release to calm markets in the aftermath of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Then when refineries in Austria and Hungary shut down unexpectedly over the summer, the governments of both countries released some reserves. When strikes closed most of the French refining system in September and October, the government there did the same.

But all the shocks that have prompted European reserve releases so far are smaller than the one coming this winter, when Europe will stop Russian imports by law. The more reserves that are used in the meantime, the less there will be to stabilise markets later.


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G20 mayors call for $800bn/yr to address climate change

G20 mayors call for $800bn/yr to address climate change

Rio de Janeiro, 19 November (Argus) — Mayors from G20 countries are asking for at least $800bn/yr in investments by 2030 to tackle the effects of climate change. "We need better and faster access to international financing to ensure infrastructure that supports the socioeconomic security of our communities," Rio de Janeiro's mayor Eduardo Paes said. The joint statement from nearly 60 mayors and urban leaders was drafted during the Urban20, a G20 forum that includes leaders from major cities worldwide, and was delivered to Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. The statement will also be delivered to other G20 members during the ongoing G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro. Climate change is one of the main topics being debated at the G20 summit. Brazil, which holds the G20 presidency this year, has set the energy transition as one of its goals for the year. The group reaffirmed its support for the Paris Agreement climate goals , saying it "fully subscribes" to the Cop 28 deal struck last year, which included language on transitioning away from fossil fuels. Urban investments such as low-emission transport, clean energy, and climate-resilient infrastructure can "significantly reduce emissions" and boost economic growth, according to the statement. The funding could unlock around $23.9 trillion in returns by 2050, it said. The $800bn/yr would cover around 20pc of urban climate finance needs and "serve as a catalyst for additional private sector funding," according to the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy, a non-government organization for climate leadership that comprises over 13,000 cities worldwide. By Lucas Parolin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Cop: Progress on actions to cut emissions uncertain


18/11/24
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18/11/24

Cop: Progress on actions to cut emissions uncertain

Baku, 18 November (Argus) — Progress on mitigation — actions to cut greenhouse gas emissions — is uncertain at the UN Cop 29 climate summit, as talks on a specific text related to the issue are at risk to be pushed back to 2025, losing any progress made in the past year. Some countries had proposed using the mitigation work programme — a work stream focused on reducing emissions — to progress the commitment made at Cop 28 in 2023 to "transition away" from fossil fuels. But talks have stalled and could end without a conclusion at the summit. Developed countries as well as developing nations including some small island states and countries in Latin America — such as Brazil, Colombia, Peru, Mexico — have expressed disappointment about how mitigation talks were going. New Zealand called on countries to follow up on last year's decision on mitigation at Cop 28 and Norway added that these issues deserved "more than silence on mitigation". Switzerland complained that mitigation was "held up by a select few", and said that the discussion was critical for increased commitments for next year's 2035 Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). NDCs are countries' climate plans that include emissions reduction targets. Cop parties are due to submit new versions by February 2025. The US also said that Cop 29 needed to "reaffirm the historical Global Stocktake decision" taken last year. And developed nations, led by the EU, called for the discussion to continue this week — the second week of Cop 29. But countries including Bolivia, Iran and Saudi Arabia, for the Arab Group, pushed back on this. The mitigation work programme is "not… open to reinterpretation", Saudi Arabia's representative said today. The country said earlier that it did not want new targets to be imposed, complaining about the "top-down approach" taken by developed countries. India reminded developed countries that they have yet to deliver on their new finance commitment — a crucial step for more ambitious NDCs in developing nations. But "Cop 29 cannot and will not be silent on mitigation", the summit's president, Mukhtar Babayev said today. "On mitigation we have been clear that we must make progress, "he said, adding that he has asked ministers from Norway and South Africa to consult on what an outcome on mitigation could look like. EU climate commissioner Wopke Hoekstra today said that it is "imperative that we send a strong signal this week for the next round of NDCs", he said. Points related to mitigation — including transitioning away from fossil fuels and phasing out inefficient fossil fuels subsidies — are currently mentioned in the draft text for the new finance goal, known as the new collective quantified goal (NCQG). It is the key issue at Cop 29. Developed countries agreed to deliver $100bn/yr in climate finance to developing nations over 2020-25, and Cop parties must decide on the next stage — including the amount. Developed countries are likely push for the fossil fuel language to stay in the finance goal text, especially if mitigation talks stall elsewhere. But countries such as Saudi Arabia have long opposed this, while developed countries have received some criticism for still not having given an amount for the new finance target. By Georgia Gratton, Prethika Nair and Caroline Varin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Cop: G20 momentum key to Cop climate finance outcome


18/11/24
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18/11/24

Cop: G20 momentum key to Cop climate finance outcome

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German diesel demand at year-high with winter shift


18/11/24
News
18/11/24

German diesel demand at year-high with winter shift

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Trump taps oil services head as US energy secretary


17/11/24
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17/11/24

Trump taps oil services head as US energy secretary

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