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Weaker global prices to weigh on oil sands in 3Q

  • Spanish Market: Crude oil
  • 28/10/24

Lower global benchmark prices will likely weigh on Alberta oil sands producers' third quarter earnings reports out this week, but expanded pipeline capacity is poised to set this coming winter apart from others.

Volatile price swings have historically been a hallmark of Alberta's oil market because of pipeline congestion and subsequent spikes in inventory levels. Canada's 590,000 b/d Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX) has helped to mitigate that since it began drawing crude from Alberta during the second quarter, but global benchmark prices have likely kept oil sands netbacks lower in recent months, despite the added flows.

Crude production in Alberta has been on the rise in 2024, averaging 4.03mn b/d in July and August, up by 3.4pc from those same two months in 2023, according to the latest figures from the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER).The added production may help offset a recent drop in Nymex WTI benchmark prices that pushed the outright price of Canada's heavy sour benchmark to about $60/bl across the third quarter, down from $69/bl a year earlier.

The higher prices in 2023 contributed to a combined profit of C$7.4bn ($5.4bn) for Canada's four largest oil sands companies — Canadian Natural Resources, Cenovus, Suncor and Imperial Oil — in the third quarter last year while pumping out 3.4mn b/d, on average. The odds of repeating those results when companies start reporting on 31 October may be a challenge given sagging global prices. But a domestic market now underpinned by ample export capacity through TMX has given producers more options to place their volumes than before.

Winter Wonderland

The differential for Western Canadian Select (WCS) at Hardisty, Alberta, was relatively steady during the third quarter, trading at a $13.50/bl discount to the light sweet benchmark at Cushing, Oklahoma, only 75¢/bl weaker than the third quarter 2023.

But so far during the fourth quarter, the differential has refused to slide to a deeper discount, instead making notable gains from last year as traders embark on final trade cycle of 2024. WCS for October and November averaged a $12.75/bl discount while December is currently pegged even tighter, at $12/bl, with the window set to open later this week. This compares to an average discount of $22/bl in the fourth quarter 2023, including a differential that deepened to beyond $26/bl in December of that year, and a December 2022 discount near $30/bl.

The recent pricing is further evidence that the expanded TMX system is having the intended effect at a time when strong production and higher diluent requirements typically cause a pinch point getting onto export lines.

TMX roughly tripled the capacity to Canada's west coast to 890,000 b/d when it was placed into service on 1 May. That same day, Cenovus' chief executive Jon McKenzie said he expected the light-heavy differentials to remain narrow "for years" as a result of the added egress.

Trans Mountain's projections show the system will likely be full by 2028, a testament to how useful the line is, according to chief executive Mark Maki earlier this month in front of a federal Natural Resources committee in Ottawa.

Fellow midstream company Enbridge in the second quarter of this year still shipped 3.08mn b/d of crude on its massive 3.1mn b/d Mainline export system to the US Midcontinent and beyond, despite competing TMX being placed into service. Enbridge is looking to expand its system by about 150,000 b/d in late-2026/early-2027 to provide yet another tranche of breathing room for producers that have upstream expansion plans of their own.

Canadian crude flows to the US Midcontinent were still intact in the early parts of the third quarter, according to data from the US Energy Information Administration (EIA).

Cenovus and Canadian Natural Resources report their third quarter results on 31 October, followed by Imperial Oil and Enbridge on 1 November. Suncor reports on 12 November.


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Cepsa rebrands to Moeve to reflect sustainability shift


30/10/24
30/10/24

Cepsa rebrands to Moeve to reflect sustainability shift

Madrid, 30 October (Argus) — Spain-based integrated energy company Cepsa has changed its name for the first time in its 95 years of existence, to Moeve (pronounced Moo-eh-vey). The change reflects Cepsa's transition "in which the majority of profits will come from sustainable activities by the end of this decade," said chief executive Maarten Wetselaar. Cepsa has sold nearly 70pc of its oil and gas production over the past two years, including its stakes in upstream assets in Abu Dhabi , in Peru and in Colombia . It has retained stakes in light crude and gas production in Algeria, which has a significantly lower carbon footprint. The company reported provisional working interest crude production of 36,000 b/d in July-September, down from 80,000 b/d in the same period of 2021. Since then it has announced an €8bn ($8.65bn) investment strategy to decarbonise much of its business through ventures such at the planned 2GW Andalusian Hydrogen Valley , announced at the end of 2022, together with second-generation biofuels, biomethane and renewables development. Cepsa, or Compañia Espanola de Petroleos SA, was founded in 1929. It has been been majority controlled by Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth investors IPIC and Mubadala Investment Company since 2011. US investment fund Carlyle acquired 37pc of the firm in 2019. By Jonathan Gleave Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Brazil fossil fuel subsidies outpace renewables: Study


29/10/24
29/10/24

Brazil fossil fuel subsidies outpace renewables: Study

Sao Paulo, 29 October (Argus) — Brazil's spending on fossil fuels subsidies in 2023 was around 4.5 times larger than its spending on renewables subsidies, according to a study published by the institute of socioeconomic studies Inesc. The country spent R99.8bn ($17.49bn) in subsidies for both fossil fuels and renewables in 2023, a 3.6pc increase from 2022, the study said. Of the total, R81.74bn were related to fossil fuels — a 0.5pc decrease from a year prior — while R18.06bn went to renewable sources, a near 27pc hike from 2022. The slight fossil fuel subsidies reduction was due to the return of taxes on gasoline, such as the VAT-like PIS/Confins, the study said. "The government lost the chance of providing greater relief for public coffers as it decided to maintain exemptions for diesel," it added. But while incentives to fossil fuel consumption decreased, those for exploration and production activities increased by R5.55bn. Cassio Carvalho, a co-author of the study for Inesc, said the fossil fuels subsidies will harm Brazil's energy transition. "The study indicates that consumers are bearing the subsidies for renewables through electricity bills, while the oil and natural gas industry remains untouched," Carvalho said. Ending subsidies to fossil fuels is an "unavoidable global commitment" laid out in the UN Cop 28 climate summit in Dubai, said Alessandra Cardoso, the other co-authored of the study. "What is expected of the Brazilian government is that it recognizes the problem of production subsidies as a domestic problem, the solution to which involves global reform," she said. "Brazil needs to take on this agenda as part of its leading role in the global climate scenario, especially as it will host Cop 30." Brazil will host Cop 30 in 2025 in Para's state capital Belem, on the edge of the Amazon forest. By Lucas Parolin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

China’s Sinopec cuts crude runs, sales in 3Q 2024


29/10/24
29/10/24

China’s Sinopec cuts crude runs, sales in 3Q 2024

San Francisco, 28 October (Argus) — Chinese state-controlled Sinopec cut crude runs and product sales in the third quarter as downstream margins weakened, leading to lower profits for the quarter. Sinopec processed 5.08mn b/d (190.69mn t) of crude in the first nine months of this year. The firm set a full-year target of 260mn t (5.2mn b/d) earlier in March. It sold 3.94mn b/d (138.06mn t) of gasoline, diesel and jet in the first nine months of this year domestically and has set a 2024 target of 191mn t. This suggests it will need to further ramp up throughput and sales in the fourth quarter to meet full-year targets. Sinopec is expected to pare back refinery runs this month from last month as margins weaken. But the company's gas output grew faster than expected. Output rose by 5.6pc on the year to 3.83bn ft³/d. It set a 2024 target of 3.78bn ft³/d earlier this year, which would be a 3pc growth from a year earlier. The company has this year "adjusted utilisation rate and product mix," it said, to counter "severe challenges" from rapidly decreasing oil prices and narrowing margins for certain products during the first nine months of this year. But this still failed to stem losses in its downstream segments in the July-September quarter, including refining and chemicals. Chinese gasoline crack spreads have collapsed to -$1.22/bl on 25 October, from their summer peak of $18.68/bl on 5 August, because of weak demand exacerbated by rapid displacement in the transport sector by electric vehicles, and this is forcing refiners to cut runs and boost exports. The company's net profit fell by 55pc on the year to 8.03bn yuan ($1.12bn) in July-September, a slightly bigger drop than some analysts estimated. Refining earnings before interest and taxes (ebit) of -$0.29/bl in the quarter is the lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2022, when it fell to -$2.61/bl. The fall in July-September ebit may be partly because of crude inventory loss, although the company did not specify. The company stepped up its "oil to chemicals" and "oil to specialties" project expansions. Its combined capital expenditure (capex) of Yn28bn for its refining and chemicals segments in January-September went to expanding the refining capacity at its 540,000 b/d Zhenhai refinery in eastern Zhejiang and adding of ethylene capacity at refineries including its 470,000 b/d Maoming refinery in southern Guangdong. Sinopec 3Q 2024 results 3Q24 3Q23 ±% Profit Yn bn Profit 8.0 17.9 -55.2 Upstream 16.1 16.2 -1.0 Refining -1.0 7.3 -113.3 Marketing 5.2 9.6 -45.4 Chemicals -1.6 -3.3 -51.5 Natural gas and pipeline NA NA NA Sales mn b/d Domestic product sales 4.1 4.3 -4.4 Total product sales 5.3 5.4 -2.0 Output Crude output mn b/d 0.8 0.8 -0.2 Natural gas output bcf/d 3.8 3.6 4.7 Refinery runs mn b/d 5.1 5.3 -4.8 Gasoline output mn b/d 1.5 1.6 -0.5 Diesel output mn b/d 1.1 1.3 -14.2 Jet output mn b/d 0.7 0.7 2.8 Source: Sinopec, Argus Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

UK ramps up climate action under new leadership


28/10/24
28/10/24

UK ramps up climate action under new leadership

London, 28 October (Argus) — The UK's Labour government, elected in July, has taken the country's climate policy in a new direction, restoring pledges the previous administration scrapped and seeking to funnel investment to renewables. The UN Cop 29 climate summit presents an opportunity for it to follow this up on an international stage. Hosting Cop 26 in 2021 allowed the UK to burnish its climate leadership credentials, but subsequent changes in the Conservative government saw policy reversals. Labour sought to differentiate its position on climate during the election campaign — possibly noting an increase in support for the UK's Green and Liberal Democrat parties, both of which hold firm pro-environment stances. Labour promised to issue no new oil, gas or coal licences — although it said it would not revoke existing permits — and is aiming for zero-emissions power by 2030. Energy minister Ed Miliband in his first week in office lifted the de facto ban on onshore wind, and set up a taskforce to speed the country's path to a decarbonised power grid. The UK has in recent weeks pulled in around £24bn ($31bn) of investment for renewables, including from utilities Orsted and Iberdrola, and announced "up to" £21.7bn in funding over 25 years for carbon capture, use and storage (CCUS) — although it is unclear how the money will be deployed. The government moved swiftly to raise the windfall tax on oil and gas profits, lifting it to an effective rate of 78pc and scrapping one of the investment allowances — although the decarbonisation investment allowance remains in place. And, spurred by a landmark ruling made by the UK's Supreme Court in June, the government pledged new environmental guidance for oil and gas fields by spring 2025. The judgment ruled that consent for an oil development was unlawful, as the Scope 3 emissions — those from burning the oil produced — were not considered. The government has in the meantime halted assessment of any environmental statements for oil and gas extraction, including those already being processed, until the new guidance is in place. The Labour government has declined to defend in court decisions taken by various iterations of the Conservative administration, including the permission granted for a proposed coal mine in northwest England. The High Court quashed that planning permission in September. International stage Miliband has sought guidance from independent advisory the Climate Change Committee (CCC) on the country's new climate plan, known as a nationally determined contribution (NDC). The CCC assessed the previous government as off track to hit legally binding emissions-reduction targets. The UK has cut emissions by half since 1990 and is in line with all carbon budgets to date. But much of this progress was made from a baseline of a high rate of coal-fired power generation, all of which is now shut down. The next stage of the country's decarbonisation will be more fragmented and is likely to pose more of a challenge. The UK has bucked the trend set by some European neighbours by shifting further left with Labour, although the new government has promoted fiscal caution. Climate finance will dominate the talks in Azerbaijan, and the UK has been clear it will continue to contribute. Labour pledged in its manifesto to "return to the forefront of climate action", noting that the previous administration had "squandered [the UK's] climate leadership". Foreign minister David Lammy has embedded climate and nature issues into his foreign policy brief and the government has appointed special representatives for climate and nature. But Cop 29 will prove the first real test of the pledges made, with a global audience watching. UK greenhouse gas emissions Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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