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Japan to release crude oil from national reserve

  • Market: Crude oil, Oil products
  • 16/02/22

Japan plans to sell Khafji and Hout crude from its strategic oil reserves, in the country's second co-ordinated Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) release with oil-consuming countries following December.

Japan's ministry of economy, trade and industry (Meti) today issued two tenders to sell around 150,000 kilolitres (944,000 bl) of Khafji crude and around 110,000 kl (692,000 bl) of Hout. Eneos' Kiire oil terminal in Kagoshima prefecture in southern Japan will supply the Khafji, while the Tomakomai-Tobu national stockpiling base on Hokkaido island will supply Hout.

Khafji crude should load from Kiire during 20 April-31 July in up to two batches. Hout crude should load from Tomakomai-Tobu in one batch between 20 April-20 August, except for 1 May-20 June. Offers must be submitted by 9 March, with the tender results finalised on the same day.

Meti announced in November that Tokyo will release several million barrels of crude oil from the country's national reserve jointly with the US, China, India, South Korea and the UK, bringing forward its scheduled sales.

Japan has been requesting oil exporters increase their production to ease soaring global oil prices to mitigate the impact on domestic oil product prices. But Meti on 27 January started providing subsidies to the country's oil suppliers, pressured by rising crude oil prices. The subsidies aim to support the country's industries such as transport, agriculture and fishery as well as household consumers.

Meti announced today that the subsidy provision from 17-23 February will be ¥5/l ($6.87/bl), maintaining maximum funding of ¥5/l for a second consecutive week. The subsidy started ¥3.40/l during 27 January-2 February, and was raised to ¥3.70/l the next week before rising to ¥5/l.

The ¥5/l subsidy was set after Japan's average gasoline retail prices increased to ¥171.40/l, up from ¥171.20/l last week. These marked the first time since September 2008 that average prices exceeded ¥171/l.


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08/10/24

Hurricanes hit short term US asphalt demand

Hurricanes hit short term US asphalt demand

Houston, 8 October (Argus) — Paving demand remains muted in the southeastern US following Hurricane Helene in September and ahead of Hurricane Milton expected to make landfall in Florida on Wednesday. Some asphalt plants in Florida were heard shutting down ahead of Hurricane Milton. Ports on Florida's Gulf coast from Tampa to Fort Myers also closed today at 8am ET. And in North Carolina, market participants expect paving work to be pushed to future dates as search and rescue operations continue in the wake of severe flooding cause by Helene. Recent heavy precipitation in Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, Tennessee and Virginia has also affected near-term demand. Parts of each state received 10-15 inches of rain over the past two weeks, according to the National Weather Service. Retail asphalt prices in Tampa, Jacksonville, Atlanta, the Carolinas, Tennessee and Southeast Virginia declined by $5/st to $15/st on 4 October. Longterm demand will likely be supported by federal emergency relief funding with budgets for state departments of transportation most likely unaffected by repair costs, according to some market participants. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) released $100mn in funding to North Carolina for roads and bridges damaged by Hurricane Helene, $2mn to South Carolina and $32mn to Tennessee, according to FHWA press releases. By Cobin Eggers Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Hurricane Milton set for late Wednesday landfall


08/10/24
News
08/10/24

Hurricane Milton set for late Wednesday landfall

New York, 8 October (Argus) — Hurricane Milton is expected to come ashore on Florida's Gulf coast near Tampa Bay late Wednesday, bringing life-threatening storm surge and destructive winds that have already spurred widespread evacuation orders. US president Joe Biden warned Milton could be one of the worst storms to hit Florida in 100 years, as he urged residents under evacuation orders to act without delay. "It's a matter of life and death," he said today. The storm was located about 520 miles southwest of Tampa at 2pm ET today, with maximum sustained winds of 155mph, according to the National Hurricane Center. Storm surge is expected to range from 10-15 feet along the Florida coast from north of Tampa to Englewood. The fall-out for offshore oil and gas production in the US Gulf of Mexico appears limited given the forecast track takes Milton far south of most platforms. Mexican state oil company Pemex said its ports in the Gulf of Mexico stopped operations over the last 24 hours as Milton passed north of the Yucatan Peninsula, but the company did not report on the status of offshore production. Milton is expected to pick up speed as it turns toward the northeast later today, with the center forecast to move across the eastern Gulf of Mexico and approach the west-central coast of Florida through Wednesday. Landfall is expected on Wednesday night before Milton sweeps across central Florida. "While fluctuations in intensity are expected, Milton is forecast to remain an extremely dangerous hurricane through landfall in Florida," the center said. Florida officials are dispatching previously stockpiled fuel to retail stations throughout the state as hundreds of thousands of residents flee the western coast. Ports and terminals on Florida's Gulf coast from Tampa to Fort Myers Beach closed at 8am ET today as a precaution. Chevron previously evacuated and shut in its Blind Faith oil and gas production platform in the Gulf of Mexico. The 65,000 b/d platform is located around 160 miles southeast of New Orleans. Crude production from Blind Faith feeds into South Louisiana Intermediate crude slate, which is not actively traded in the spot market but is typically priced using Heavy Louisiana Sweet. Shell, BP and ExxonMobil all said there has been no impact to their drilling or production in the Gulf of Mexico, although the companies continue to monitor the hurricane. By Stephen Cunningham Hurricane Milton projected path Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Buckeye shutting Tampa terminals as storm approaches


08/10/24
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08/10/24

Buckeye shutting Tampa terminals as storm approaches

Houston, 8 October (Argus) — Pipeline company Buckeye Partners is shutting its Tampa, Florida, fuel terminals today as Hurricane Milton approaches the state's west coast. Buckeye's Tampa North and Tampa South terminals have over 1mn bl of gasoline, ultra low sulfur diesel, ultra low sulfur heating oil and ethanol storage capacity with truck, marine and pipeline access. The Buckeye terminals — alongside Citgo and Kinder Morgan terminals in Tampa — are shutting today in anticipation of the storm slated to make landfall late Wednesday, the company said today. Florida governor Ron DeSantis warned earlier today of the likelihood of significant damage to the port of Tampa that will affect fuel supply in the state after Milton passes through. "Buckeye will work to safely restore operations as soon as possible," the company said. By Nathan Risser Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Florida retail gasoline supplies tighten ahead of storm


08/10/24
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08/10/24

Florida retail gasoline supplies tighten ahead of storm

Houston, 8 October (Argus) — Florida officials are dispatching previously stockpiled fuel to retail stations throughout the state as hundreds of thousands of residents flee the western coast ahead of Hurricane Milton. Florida had more than 110,000 USG of gasoline and 268,000 USG of diesel on hand ahead of the storm and another 1.2mn USG of both en route to the state, governor Ron DeSantis (R) said today. The state has been dispatching those reserves to gas stations that have run out of fuel as residents evacuate coastal areas ahead of Milton, which is expected to come ashore late Wednesday near Tampa as a major storm. The Florida Highway Patrol late Monday escorted 27 fuel trucks to fuel stations in the anticipated path of Milton, and the state is working with fuel sellers Racetrac, Wawa, Shell and Walmart to maintain supplies, DeSantis said. Panic buying in southwest Florida led some gas stations to run out of fuel as early as Monday, according to a wholesaler operating in the region. Florida is the third largest US state by both population and gasoline demand, consuming about 600,000 b/d in 2022, according the US Energy Information Administration. The stockpiles and additional supply en route DeSantis outlined would be equal to about about 31,000 bls, or 5pc of daily demand. Despite the need to dispatch the fuel DeSantis insists "there is no fuel shortage … fuel continues to arrive in the state of Florida," but lines at gas stations are long and demand is depleting reserves faster than normal. Florida has no refineries and imports all its gasoline, diesel and jet fuel by truck and ship, meaning it can face significant disruption if ports and roadways are closed by a storm. Florida's fuels infrastructure was quick to recover last year in the aftermath of category 3 Hurricane Idalia, but this year's storm looks set to bring greater damage. Bigger fuel issues ahead for Tampa "We are assuming … that there is going to be significant damage to the port of Tampa," affecting the port's ability to receive fuel shipments after Milton passes through, DeSantis said today. Ports on Florida's Gulf coast from Tampa to Fort Myers Beach closed at 8am ET today ahead of the expected landfall. Kinder Morgan is planning to shut its terminals and fuel racks in Tampa today. Kinder's Tampa refined products terminal has 1.8mn bls of storage and is connected to the Central Florida Pipeline (CFPL) which transports gasoline, diesel, ethanol and jet fuel to Orlando, including to Orlando International Airport. The airport said today that it will cease operations the morning of 9 October. Citgo is also shutting down its Tampa fuels terminal, the company said early today. The terminal imports waterborne ultra low sulfur diesel and gasoline. ExxonMobil said it is closely monitoring the situation and its Ft Lauderdale terminal on the Atlantic coast side of the state and south of the expected hurricane landfall zone is operating as normal. Hillsborough County issued a mandatory evacuation order Monday for coastal residents along Tampa Bay. Much of Pinellas County on the western side of the Tampa Bay is also under a mandatory evacuation order. By Nathan Risser Hurricane Milton projected path Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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September was second hottest: EU's Copernicus


08/10/24
News
08/10/24

September was second hottest: EU's Copernicus

London, 8 October (Argus) — Last month was the second hottest September on record globally, after September 2023, with average temperatures 0.73°C higher than the 1991-2020 average for the month, according to data from the EU climate-monitoring service Copernicus. Last month's average temperatures globally were 1.54°C above pre-industrial (1850-1900) levels and September's average was the 14th month in a 15-month period when the global average surface air temperature was more than 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. The global average temperature for the 12 months to September was the second highest on record for any 12-month period — 0.74°C above the 1991-2020 average, and an estimated 1.62°C above the 1850-1900 pre-industrial average. The January–September 2024 global-average temperature was 0.71°C above the 1991-2020 average, the highest on record for the period and 0.19°C warmer than the same period in 2023. It is almost certain that 2024 will turn out to be the warmest year on record, Copernicus said. The average temperature over European land for September 2024 was 1.74°C above the 1991-2020 average for September, making it the second warmest September on record for Europe after September 2023, which was 2.51°C above average. Last month also had exceptionally high rainfall levels across much of the continent, with widespread floods across central Europe. Last year was the hottest on record , averaging 1.45°C above pre-industrial temperatures. By Gavin Attridge Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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