Latest Market News

PetroPeru initiates monthly spot crude sales

  • Spanish Market: Crude oil, Oil products
  • 25/11/19

State-owned PetroPeru will start first-ever monthly spot crude sales early next year as its main refinery closes for a long-delayed expansion project.

The company said it will take initial orders for spot purchases starting tomorrow. In January it will begin making two monthly shipments of 300,000 bl of light crude, with a quality of 34.6°API and 0.08pc sulphur.

PetroPeru later plans to sell one shipment per month of up to 750,000 bl once a new subsea pipeline at its Talara refinery is completed at the end of first quarter 2020.

The 65,000 b/d Talara refinery on the northern coast will close for 14 months to complete the $5.4bn upgrade. The plant will reopen in 2021 with a processing capacity of 95,000 b/d and new equipment that will allow it to refine heavier crude. Spanish contractor Tecnicas Reunidas is leading the Talara project.

PetroPeru began closing its Lima-based 15,500 b/d Conchan refinery on 20 November for four weeks of scheduled maintenance as it prepares to receive additional shipments while Talara is off line. Conchan has storage capacity of 2.3mn bl. The small plant will reopen at the end of December.

Peru's average crude production from 26 blocks was 56,000 b/d in October, slightly higher than the same month last year.

Peru's other main refinery is 117,000 b/d La Pampilla, owned by Spain's Repsol.

By Lucien Chauvin


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.

29/07/24

Product demand surges in Germany after prices dip

Product demand surges in Germany after prices dip

Hamburg, 29 July (Argus) — Demand for heating oil and road fuels rose on the week in Germany after falling Ice gasoil futures caused domestic distillate prices to dip. The increase in demand, particularly on 22 July, was partly caused by the global IT problems on 19 July after a faulty update by cybersecurity company Crowdstrike. Loadings at Shell's 334,000 b/d Rhineland refinery and the Bayernoil consortium's 215,000 b/d Vohburg-Neustadt refinery were interrupted by the IT problem and some traders had to postpone trades until 22 July. Overall demand remains short of traders' expectations, however, which is reflected in the comparatively low storage levels in private heating oil tanks and industrial diesel tanks. Both are more than one percentage point below levels at this time last year, according to data from Argus MDX. The lower storage levels despite retreating prices have been partly attributed to the current holiday season, traders said. Domestic refining output continues to cover buying interest sufficiently, so Germany's diesel imports also remain low. Rising import margins and receding oversupply could make imports more profitable soon. Prices in western and southern Germany remain higher. Technical problems at the Rhineland and the Vohburg-Neustadt refineries had caused prices to surge earlier in July. The refineries' operators have since been able to fix the technical problems, which could soon lead to prices falling again. Gasoline is already being traded below the national average again in the south. By Natalie Mueller Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia’s Queensland to fund SAF project, studies


29/07/24
29/07/24

Australia’s Queensland to fund SAF project, studies

Sydney, 29 July (Argus) — Australia's Queensland state government has earmarked around A$1.5mn ($980,000) to support two new sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) proposals, while backing a multi-seed crushing and processing facility with separate funding. The government's Industry Partnership Program will contribute to Australian grains processing firm Energreen's multi-seed crushing and processing facility near the central Queensland cotton-growing town of Emerald, although a government spokeswoman declined to quantify the state's financial support for the project describing it as "commercial in confidence." The A$22mn plant plans to have capacity for 70,000 t/yr, with Energreen considering pongamia oil production in the longer term as a potential SAF feedstock. Queensland will also grant both private-sector domestic firm Wagner Sustainable Fuels and Australian-owned energy company Liquid Power A$760,000 each for feasibility studies to develop the case for investment in their own SAF proposals. Wagner announced in April a partnership with aircraft manufacturer Boeing Australia to develop a SAF blending facility at its Wellcamp Airport near the inland city of Toowoomba, west of state capital Brisbane. Liquid Power is aiming to develop sustainable fuels projects for hard to transition sectors totalling 250 megalitres, according to the firm. Australia's largest airline Qantas has a target of using 10pc SAF by 2030, or around 10,000 b/d, and is investing in a $200mn fund to accelerate global production . Australian bioenergy developer Jet Zero is emerging as the likeliest initial SAF project in Australia with its planned 102mn litres/yr SAF plant in north Queensland where significant feedstock supplies are located. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Tension builds after Venezuela vote


29/07/24
29/07/24

Tension builds after Venezuela vote

Caracas, 29 July (Argus) — Violence after polls closed in Venezuela's election late Sunday evening pointed to more uncertainty as President Nicolas Maduro seeks a third term in a race marred by harassment of the opposition and amid reimposition of US oil sanctions. One man was shot and killed at a voting center and the main coalition of parties running against Maduro denounced severe irregularities during tallies after the vote. The electoral authority (CNE) ordered some polling stations to stop transmitting vote counts to CNE headquarters in Caracas, opposition leader Delsa Solorzano said. Solorzano also said opposition witnesses had been kicked out of polling stations and denied required copies of vote tallies. "The transmission of results, of the tallies, has been paralyzed", Solorzano, the top opposition representative before CNE, said on social media. Maduro has not spoken publicly since midday in Venezuela and he has not claimed victory. Opposition candidate Edmundo Gonzalez, running in the place of blocked candidate Maria Corina Machado, said that he would defend the results. Exit polls indicated that 65.8pc of voters supported Gonzalez, with 13.5pc voting for Maduro, out of 52pc of eligible voters participating, pollster Meganalisis said. "The results are impossible to hide, the country has chosen peaceful change," Gonzalez said. The election began auspiciously, with long lines since Saturday night, uneventful voting and heavy turnouts. But nighttime brought some violence once rumors of Maduro losing the election began circulating. In addition to the one person shot at a voting center, pro-Maduro motorcycle gangs threatened polling stations and opposition members and witnesses, and some ballots have been burned, opposition representatives said. The US administration has said it would be prepared to provide guarantees for Venezuela's government leaders if Maduro loses the election and lets the winner take power. The opposition also said this week that it would move to open the energy sector to outside investment if it takes power, and the sector faces massive repairs after decades of underinvestment in its infrastructure. Maduro in the last days of the campaign touted energy plans such as signing an agreement to explore for and produce natural gas in the offshore Cocuina-Manakin fields that straddles Venezuela's maritime border with Trinidad and Tobago. Gasoline and electricity shortages continued to plague the country with some of the world's largest oil reserves throughout the campaign. By Carlos Camacho Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Eni confident on 2024 output, but Libya project slips


26/07/24
26/07/24

Eni confident on 2024 output, but Libya project slips

London, 26 July (Argus) — Executives at Italy's Eni are confident it will achieve the upper end of its 1.69mn-1.71mn production guidance for this year, but start-up of a key Libyan project is set to slip from 2026 into 2027. In a presentation of second-quarter earnings today, A&E Structure was one of two Libyan projects on a list of Eni's upcoming start-ups through to 2028 that will deliver some 740,000 b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d) of net production to the company. A&E Structure is a 160,000 boe/d gas development that will include some 40,000 b/d of liquids production, mainly condensate. A&E Structure is central to Libya's ability to sustain gas exports to Italy, which have dropped in recent years on a combination of rising domestic consumption and falling production. Supplies through the 775mn ft³/d Greenstream pipeline hit their lowest since the 2011 revolution in 2023, averaging 250mn ft³/d. The slide has continued since, with year-to-date volumes of around 160mn ft³/d on track for a record low. Eni's other upcoming Libyan project — the Bouri Gas Utilisation Project development that aims to capture 85mn ft³/d of gas at the 25,000 b/d offshore Bouri oil field — had already been pushed back from 2025 to 2026. For 2024 Eni expects to be "at the upper boundary of its guidance", according to chief operating officer of Natural Resources Guido Brusco. The company had a strong first half, during which output was 1.73mn boe/d — 5pc up on the year — thanks to good performance at assets in Ivory Coast, Indonesia, Congo (Brazzaville) and Libya. Brusco said Eni is in the process of starting up its 30,000 boe/d Cassiopea gas project in Italy, with first production expected next month, and the 45,000 b/d second phase of the Baleine oil project in Ivory Coast is expected to start by the end of this year. At Baleine, Brusco confirmed the two vessels to be used at phase two "will be in country in September and, building on the experience of phase one, we expect a couple of months of final integrated commissioning" before first oil. Eni also said today it would raise its dividend for 2024 by 6pc over 2023 to €1/share, and confirmed share repurchases this year of €1.6bn. It said there is potential for an additional buyback of up to €500mn, which is being evaluated this quarter. Eni's debt gearing is scheduled to fall below 20pc by the end of the year. Chief financial officer Francesco Gattei said these accelerated share buybacks would be possible if divestment deals are confirmed. By Jon Mainwaring and Aydin Calik Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Yemen warring factions reach UN-mediated financial deal


25/07/24
25/07/24

Yemen warring factions reach UN-mediated financial deal

Dubai, 25 July (Argus) — The UAE today welcomed a UN-mediated agreement between Yemen's warring factions that could allay economic woes in the impoverished country. The UAE's ministry of foreign affairs hailed the 23 July announcement of an agreement between the internationally recognised Yemen presidential leadership council (PLC) and the Houthi militant group "with respect to airlines and the banking sector." The UAE, alongside Saudi Arabia, support the PLC. The agreement stipulates "cancelling all the recent decisions and procedures against banks by both sides and refraining in the future from any similar decisions or procedures," and calls for the resumption of Yemenia Airways' flights between Sana'a and Jordan at three a day and operating flights to Cairo and India "daily or as needed." The deal was reached two days after Israeli jets bombed the Houthi-controlled Red Sea port of Hodeidah. The internationally-recognised central bank in Aden in April ordered financial institutions to move their main operations from Houthi-held territory within 60 days or face sanctions. That deadline ran out in June, leading to a ban on dealing with six banks whose headquarters remained in Houthi-held Sana'a. The Houthis retaliated by taking similar measures against banks in PLC-held areas and seized four Yemenia Airways planes at Sana'a airport. The PLC said it hoped the Houthis would also meet a commitment to resume crude exports. Yemen's crude production collapsed soon after the start of the country's civil war, from around 170,000 b/d in 2011-13 to 50,000-60,000 b/d in 2022, according to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy. Data from analytics firm Kpler suggests Yemen has not exported any crude since October 2022. Threats yield results The Iran-backed Houthis earlier in July threatened to attack vital infrastructure such as airports and ports in Saudi Arabia, holding Riyadh responsible for decisions taken by Aden's central bank. The Houthis struck central Tel Aviv on 19 July, inviting an Israeli retaliation that took out a power station that supplies the Red Sea coastal city of Hodeidah and its port and fuel tanks, which are controlled by the Houthis. A breakthrough in the UN-mediated talks between the PLC and the Houthis resulted in the agreement on 22 July, a possible sign that Riyadh might have compromised to avoid a Houthi escalation. The Houthis have been attacking commercial ships in and around the Red Sea since November last year, six weeks after the breakout of the Israel-Hamas war, in what they say is an act of solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza. By Bachar Halabi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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