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Australia mulls introducing fuel efficiency standards

  • : Emissions, Oil products
  • 22/08/19

The Australian federal government said it will reconsider introducing fuel efficiency standards for passenger vehicles. A consultation paper on the issue next month will also outline an electric vehicle (EV) strategy as part of efforts to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

"We believe that now is the time to have a sensible discussion about whether fuel efficiency standards could help improve the supply of electric vehicles into our market, to address the cost of living impacts of inefficient cars and to reduce emissions from the transport sector," said Australian energy and climate minister Chris Bowen. Transport accounted for 18pc of the country's total emissions in 2021.

Australia is the only country in the OECD to not have, or be in the process of developing, fuel efficiency standards, Bowen said.

Australia has carried out several reviews over the past two decades to introduce mandatory fuel efficiency standards but has previously faced resistance from the car industry. But Australia stopped manufacturing motor vehicles in October 2017 and now imports all its passenger vehicles, while it is dependent on oil product imports to meet its 1mn b/d liquid fuel demand.

Australia imported A$46.71bn ($32.27bn) worth of crude feedstock and oil imports in the 2021-22 fiscal year to 30 June. Australia's product imports this year hit a record high in June, reflecting the closure of two Australian refineries last year, while its crude imports fell to their lowest daily average in over 11 years. Australia also has a target to reduce GHG emissions by 43pc by 2030 from 2005 levels.

The consultation paper will also outline the government's plans to boost the take-up of EVs, which accounts for 2pc of current new cars sales in Australia. This compared with average of 15pc of new car sales in the UK and 17pc in the EU in other developed countries.

The government plans to set up a truly national EV charging network with charging stations at an average interval of 150km on major roads, Bowen said. It also plans to set a low emissions vehicle target for the Australian government's car fleet of 75pc of new leases and purchases by 2025.

"With thousands of vehicles in the Commonwealth fleet, it is big enough to encourage more EV model introductions to Australia and to expand a resale market," Bowen said.

Australia's Climate Change Authority recommended in 2014 the introduction of fuel efficiency standards to reduce the emissions intensity of the Australian light vehicle fleet from 192g of carbon dioxide (CO2)/km in 2013 to 105g of CO2/km in 2025. Modelling later done by the Bureau of Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Economics, as part of the Australian ministerial forum into vehicle emissions, found these standards would have a net benefit to the economy of A$13.9bn by 2040 and save Australia A$48.70 for every tonne of CO2 avoided, said a report by think tank the Australian Institute.


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25/01/02

Viewpoint: USGC diesel exports may get European boost

Viewpoint: USGC diesel exports may get European boost

Houston, 2 January (Argus) — US Gulf coast (USGC) diesel exports were on pace to rise in 2024, and growing demand from Europe could sustain the trend into 2025 as Brazil demand may falter. US Gulf coast diesel exports rose to an estimated 242mn bl, or 661,000 b/d in 2024, up by 9.5pc from 2023, according to oil analytics firm Vortexa. Figures are still subject to revisions as more information about cargoes and destinations in the final weeks of December become known. Exports strengthened in the second half of 2024 despite headwinds. From July through December, exports rose to 728,000 b/d, up from 593,000 b/d in the first half of the year. Europe was the top destination for US Gulf coast diesel exports in 2024, receiving 216,000 b/d, or 33pc, of the region's exports, up from 135,000 b/d, or 22pc, in 2023. South America was the second biggest destination for US Gulf coast diesel exports in 2024, even as the continent's share fell to 29pc from 35.5pc in 2023. Central America and Mexico received 24pc of US Gulf coast diesel exports in 2024. US Gulf coast diesel exports to Mexico dropped to 103,000 b/d during the second half of the year, down by 21pc from the first half of 2024, according to Vortexa. Mexico's energy policies aim to drive the country closer to energy independence, and Pemex's new 340,000 b/d Dos Bocas refinery is one tool to achieve that goal. The refinery was scheduled to fully be on line in 2024 but operated only intermittently during the year. It is expected to run more steadily in the first quarter 2025, according to market sources. This could further reduce shipments from the US Gulf coast to Mexico. But demand in other markets may mitigate this loss. While the total volume of diesel shipped to Mexico, Central and South America dropped by 12.2pc in 2024, diesel exports to the regions are expected to remain resilient in 2025, despite a traditional slowdown in the first two months of the year. Typically, US Gulf coast diesel exports in January and February slow as winter weather clips European demand while South American demand drops after the main summer planting season concludes and as summer holidays reduce the number of trucks on the road. Exports will likely pick up in March and continue to increase as the soybean harvest in Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay boosts demand. Warmer weather in Europe will also increase demand as driving increases while European refiners undergo maintenance turnarounds in March and April. EU diesel demand was strong in 2024 even as the energy transition advances renewable diesel and cleaner fuel sources. Among newly registered heavy trucks in the EU, 96.6pc run on diesel and 67pc of buses run on diesel, according to the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association. European lawmakers plan to phase out sales of new diesel trucks and cars by 2040 and 2035, respectively, delayed from a prior 2030 deadline. This will ensure demand remains stable, if not higher, for 2025. Russia's lower-priced diesel exports fulfilled Brazil's external needs for diesel in the first half of 2024. But in June, Russian refiners were unable to produce enough diesel to meet the country's demand, boosting US Gulf coast exports to Brazil to 43,000 b/d in the second half of the year, almost five times higher than the first half. Still, total US Gulf coast export volumes to Brazil for full-year 2024 were down by half when compared with 2023, as Russian exports to Brazil grew by 17pc to 150,000 b/d in 2024. Slowing growth in Brazil is also likely to curb diesel demand next year. Brazil's central bank forecasts economic growth to slow to 2pc in 2025 from 3.5pc in 2024 on expectations for higher borrowing costs, as the depreciation of the real currency accelerated at the end of the year. Even so, US Gulf coast exporters will be poised to fill whatever demand Brazil can offer next year. Going into the new year, US Gulf coast refiners seeking to export diesel will face challenges, but enough demand remains to keep volumes on track or even higher than 2024 levels. By Carrie Carter Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: North American BZ, SM output to dip in 2025


25/01/02
25/01/02

Viewpoint: North American BZ, SM output to dip in 2025

Houston, 2 January (Argus) — North American benzene (BZ) and derivative styrene monomer (SM) production and operating rates may decline in 2025 as production costs climb. SM and derivative output will likely see a drop due to the permanent closure of a SM plant in Sarnia and an acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) plant in Ohio. In 2024, SM operating rates averaged about 71-72pc of capacity, up by 1-2 percentage points from the year prior, according to Argus data. In 2025, operating rates are expected to pull back closer to 70pc due to lackluster underlying demand, offsetting the impact of the two plant closures. Many SM producers on the US Gulf coast are entering 2025 at reduced rates due to high variable production cash costs against the SM spot price. The BZ contract price and higher ethylene prices recently pushed up production costs for SM producers. A heavy upstream ethylene cracker turnaround season in early 2025 will keep derivative SM production costs elevated in Louisiana, stifling motivation for some downstream SM operators to run at normal rates. Gulf coast BZ prices typically fall when SM demand is weak. But imports from Asia are projected to decline, leading to tighter supply in North America that could keep BZ prices elevated. BZ imports from Asia are expected to decline in 2025 because of fewer arbitrage opportunities, as Asia and US BZ prices are expected to remain near parity in the first half of the year. The import arbitrage from South Korea to the Gulf coast was closed for much of the fourth quarter of 2024. Prices in Asia have garnered support because of demand from China for BZ and derivatives, as well as from aromatics production costs in the region that have increased alongside higher naphtha prices. In January-October 2024, over 60pc of US BZ imports originated from northeast Asia, according to Global Trade Tracker data. Losing any portion of those imports typically tightens the US market and drives up domestic demand for BZ. But tighter BZ supply due to lower imports may be mitigated by SM producers, if they continue to run at reduced rates in 2025. The US Gulf coast is around 100,000 metric tonnes (t) net short monthly on BZ, but market sources say the soft SM demand outlook for 2025 will cut US BZ import needs almost in half. Despite fewer BZ imports to North America, reduced SM consumption could hamper run rates for BZ production from selective toluene disproportionation (STDP) unit operators. The biggest obstacle for STDP operators in 2025 will like be paraxylene (PX) demand. Since STDP units produce BZ alongside PX, there needs to be domestic demand for PX. But demand has been weak due to PX imports and derivative polyethylene terephthalate (PET). STDP operations increased at the end 2025 after running at at minimum rates or being idled since 2022. This came as BZ prices consistently eclipsed feedstock toluene prices. The BZ to feedstock nitration-grade toluene spread averaged 30.5¢/USG in 2024 and the BZ to feedstock commercial-grade toluene (CGT) spread averaged 49.25¢/USG, according to Argus data. This means that for much of the year STDP operators could justify running units at higher rates to produce more BZ and PX. But another challenge to consider on STDP run rates in 2025 is the value of toluene for gasoline blending compared to its value for chemical production. In 2022 and 2023, the toluene value into octanes was higher than going into an STDP for BZ and PX production. Feedstock toluene imports are poised to fall in 2025, a factor that would narrow STDP margins and further hamper on-purpose benzene production in the US in 2025. By Jake Caldwell Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Pakistan's NRL issues tender to sell January bitumen


25/01/02
25/01/02

Pakistan's NRL issues tender to sell January bitumen

Singapore, 2 January (Argus) — Pakistani refiner NRL is offering bulk and drummed bitumen cargoes totalling 8,000t for loading over January, in their latest export tender. The refiner is seeking fixed price bids on a fob Karachi basis for 2,000t of pen 80/100 drummed bitumen cargo and 6,000t of pen 60/70 bulk bitumen cargo. The drummed cargo tender is expected to be closed on 9 January and loaded within 30 days from the date of award, while the bulk cargo tender will close on 6 January, sources involved with the tender process said. The refiner had awarded its December-loading cargo to Switzerland-based trading firm Element Alpha, after withdrawing two previous tenders for loading over October and November. Pakistani cargoes are typically sought by international bitumen traders for delivery into South Africa. By Sathya Narayanan Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: USGC gasoline oversupply unlikely to ease


24/12/31
24/12/31

Viewpoint: USGC gasoline oversupply unlikely to ease

Houston, 31 December (Argus) — Refinery closures and increased export opportunities in the US Gulf coast (USGC) will likely do little to alleviate an oversupply of regional gasoline in early 2025 as refining capacity in Mexico expands. LyondellBasell's 264,000 b/d Houston refinery tentatively plans to shut down during the first quarter of 2025 after previously delaying an end to production from the final quarter of 2023. Though some refiners welcome refinery shutdowns to provide a lift to falling margins , market participants have suggested that the upcoming closures will not considerably reduce the oversupply of product in the region. The Gulf coast's weekly average output totaled 2.2mn b/d in 2024, over one-fifth of the US's 9.7mn b/d weekly average. LyondellBasell's Houston refinery closure could cause total weekly production in the region to contract by as much as 12pc if it goes as planned. Product supplied, a proxy used by the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) for finished motor gasoline demand nationwide, has not recovered to pre-pandemic levels. Demand had fallen to fresh lows of 8.15mn b/d in 2020, when Covid-19 pandemic restrictions limited travel, but marginally regained strength after those measures were lifted. In the five years prior to the pandemic, gasoline product supplied ranged between a yearly average of 8.86mn-9.34mn b/d. In 2024, it averaged 8.85mn b/d, just below the pre-pandemic five-year average, but has grown for a second consecutive year after hitting a record low of 8.1mn b/d for 2022. In its energy outlook for 2025, the Louisiana State University's (LSU) Center for Energy Studies said it expected domestic demand to remain relatively flat, but that increased US net exports could shave off excess supply. Gulf coast gasoline stockpiles have exhibited steady growth since 2022, largely outpacing demand for the product, EIA data indicates. In the five years prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, weekly inventory averages ranged between 75mn-83mn bl. After hitting a record weekly average of 86.9mn bl in 2020, stockpiles have hovered above the pre-pandemic range for every year since, with 2024 weekly average inventory levels totaling 83.1mn bl. Gasoline prices peaked in 2022 due to rebounding gasoline demand since the pandemic. Though prices remain above the $2/USG mark since 2020, cash prices for 87 conventional finished gasoline in 2024 averaged 68¢/USG lower than in 2022 and 23¢/USG less than 2023's average, further depressing refining margins from a year earlier. Exports: a closing door Both exports to Latin America and domestic shipments to the US east coast have historically absorbed excess supplies of Gulf coast gasoline, but increased refining capacity and a potential trade war between the US and Mexico could choke off exports to Latin America. Market participants point to exports as a favorable outlet for excess gasoline supply with export data showing a strong correlation with the stock build in the Gulf coast since 2022. The US Gulf coast exported an average of 251,000 b/d in 2024 after four consecutive years of gains, according to trade analytics firm Kpler. Export levels out of the region are more than double the pre-pandemic four-year average of 121,750 b/d. However, Pemex's 400,000 b/d Dos Bocas refinery in Mexico is projected to come on line in late 2025 and will likely reduce the Gulf coast's share of the gasoline export market. Mexico imports nearly 90pc of its gasoline from the US , while roughly 82pc of Gulf coast exports land in Mexico, according to separate Kpler data. Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum has continued expanding Mexico's energy independence, with 2024 marking the closest in nine years that gasoline production has approached import levels . Furthermore, US president-elect Donald Trump's potential 25pc tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico, including oil and gas, could spark retaliatory tariffs from Mexico, previously threatened by Sheinbaum. Should Trump go through with the tariffs when he takes office on 20 January, the tariffs between both countries would cut off gasoline exports and leave stockpile levels in the Gulf coast significantly higher. By Hannah Borai Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: Power demand could bolster RGGI allowances


24/12/31
24/12/31

Viewpoint: Power demand could bolster RGGI allowances

Houston, 31 December (Argus) — Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) CO2 allowances in 2025 could get a boost from a projected increase in electricity demand, despite uncertainty over the RGGI states' ongoing program review. Allowance prices hit record highs this past year, particularly during the summer as high temperatures raised expectations for emissions, increasing compliance demand. The first three auctions of 2024 cleared at record levels, draining the cost containment reserve (CCR) — a mechanism where additional allowances are released to temper rising prices — during the March auction . Prices followed suit in the secondary market, reaching multiple all-time highs before peaking on 20 August, with Argus assessing December 2024 and prompt-month allowances at $27.82/short ton (st) and $27.31/st, respectively. The increases have been fueled by anticipated growth in electricity demand as states work to implement policies promoting electrification in the transportation, industrial and heating sectors. In New England alone, peak power demand is forecast to double from 27,000MW to 55,000MW by 2050, according to an Acadia Center report . But the biggest source of this demand — and the steady climb in RGGI allowance prices since late-2023 — is the rapid expansion of data centers, according to University of Virginia professor William Shobe, who studies emissions market and auction design. New CO2-emitting sources such as natural gas-fired plants must factor rising allowance prices into the future cost of electricity in the long-run, Shobe said. As prices rise, other cleaner sources of energy, such as offshore wind and small modular reactors, will become more competitive, he said. Review the review The member states of RGGI launched a review of the program in February 2021. As power demand creates a potential for a bullish RGGI market, the review remains a source of uncertainty for participants and volatility in the secondary market. The program review includes considerations for a more ambitious emissions cap plan beyond 2030. But it has faced a number of delays and was originally scheduled to wrap up last year . Member states have provided few updates on the status and timeline of the review, leaving participants and environmental groups alike on tenterhooks over how a finalized program review — and with it, an updated emissions cap plan — will affect the future supply of allowances. Participants "are always thinking about future scarcity", said Shobe. "The more information we can give them about the future path of scarcity (of allowances) now, the more efficient their own behavior can be." The latest updates were released in September. They included an emissions cap plan that combined two previously floated proposals where the allowance budget starts at about 70mn st, declining at a rate consistent with a zero-by-2035 goal from 2027-2033 and a lower rate consistent with a zero-by-2040 goal from 2033-2037. Member states are also considering adding a second CCR and eliminating the emissions containment reserve (ECR), a market mechanism designed to respond to falling prices by withholding allowances. The review is planned to end in early 2025. A draft rule with additional modeling was to be released in the fall, but there have been no updates regarding another change in timeline. RGGI has not responded to requests for comment. States in limbo The status of Virginia — which left RGGI in 2023 — and Pennsylvania as potential members is another point of uncertainty as those states' participation are under legal scrutiny in their respective courts. Virginia's Floyd County Circuit Court in November ruled that regulation enabling the state's exit from RGGI was unlawful since it was enacted without legislative approval. Governor Glen Youngkin's (R) administration intends to appeal to the Supreme Court of Virginia sometime in 2025, but has declined to specify when. While it is unlikely Virginia will rejoin RGGI in the interim, its participation would increase demand for allowances and put an "upward pressure on price", Shobe said. Much of this demand would be fueled by data center expansion, as northern Virginia is the largest market for data centers in the world, with 25pc of all reported data center operational capacity in the Americas and 13pc globally, according to a report by a state legislative commission. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania is also reviewing a lower-court decision striking down CO2 trading regulation allowing the state to participate in RGGI. Governor Josh Shapiro (D) has reluctantly defended Pennsylvania's membership in the program as an issue of preserving executive authority, and Republican state lawmakers have been attempting to revive legislation that would cement the state's exit from RGGI. The state's high court could issue a decision sometime in 2025. But Governor Shapiro also proposed a state-specific power plant CO2 cap-and-trade program earlier this year — another development participants should keep an eye on. By Ida Balakrishna Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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