Biden pushes climate, infrastructure spending

  • Market: Crude oil, Emissions
  • 29/04/21

US president Joe Biden today called on lawmakers to approve his multi-trillion dollar proposals to rebuild infrastructure and invest in climate-focused projects — in part to position the US to win an economic and technological race with China.

"We are in a competition with China and other countries to win the 21st Century," Biden said in his first address to Congress. "We will see more technological change in the next 10 years than we saw in the last 50 years, and we are falling behind in that competition."

Biden took to the podium to defend the major initiatives he has advanced during his first 100 days in office. Congress already has enacted, voting along party lines, the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan of measures to bolster the economy and accelerate vaccine distribution.

Biden's $2.3 trillion American Jobs Act proposal to invest in infrastructure and advance energy transition over the next eight years is facing greater scrutiny in part because it is funded by raising corporate tax rates and removing tax breaks for oil and gas companies. The White House today released an even more ambitious proposal, the American Families Act, that would guarantee free public college education for every American and expand access to childcare, to be funded via an increase in personal tax rates for the highest-earning Americans.

While Biden is making overtures to Republicans in Congress — inviting legislative leaders of both parties for a White House summit on 12 May — passing his initiatives requires full cooperation from the thin majorities Democrats hold in the House of Representatives and the Senate.

Biden's reference to China may, in part, be an appeal to otherwise skeptical lawmakers to support his domestic priorities. Biden and his advisers say that they can advance their foreign policy priorities only if the US regains the technological and manufacturing advantage they say has eroded in recent decades.

"There is no reason the blades for wind turbines cannot be built in Pittsburgh instead of Beijing," Biden said.

US trade representative Katherine Tai earlier today downplayed concerns about the negative effects of punitive tariffs on Chinese-made solar panels on Biden's renewable energy proposals. Without high tariffs, "we will continue to experience these types of fights over the last scraps of an industry that we have lost to competitors and in particular, to the Chinese," Tai said.

The unusual setting for this address, with the chamber and the gallery only partially occupied by 200 members of Congress and government officials, was a reminder that the US is still fighting a pandemic that has killed 574,000 US residents and ravaged the economy.

But the Biden administration is taking credit for accelerating the vaccination rate to allow for lifting of travel and restrictions on economic activity by state governments. More than a third of the US adult population has been fully vaccinated. And herd immunity, which US health authorities define as over 70pc of the population being protected against Covid-19, can be achieved by late summer.

"America is on the move again, turning peril into possibility, crisis into opportunity, setback into strength," Biden said.

The US administration earlier this week launched its first major exercise in vaccine diplomacy, agreeing to make available to foreign countries 60mn doses of AstraZeneca vaccines that the US has ordered but does not plan to administer.

And Biden today pledged to make US-made and approved vaccines available to the rest of the world as soon as the US vaccination effort is complete.

"As our own vaccine supply grows to meet our needs, and we are meeting them, we will become an arsenal of vaccines for other countries, just as America was the arsenal of democracy in World War II," Biden said.


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28/03/24

Australia to delay mandatory climate reporting to 2025

Australia to delay mandatory climate reporting to 2025

Sydney, 28 March (Argus) — Australia's biggest companies will likely face mandatory climate reporting from 1 January 2025, six months later than originally planned, according to a bill the Australian federal government introduced in parliament. Under the revised proposal, the country's largest companies and financial institutions will need to start disclosing their climate-related risks and opportunities, including scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, within their annual sustainability reports from 1 January 2025 instead of 1 July as previously intended . Scope 3 emissions disclosure will continue to be required from the second year of reporting. Companies will be arranged in three groups, with group 1 entities including companies meeting at least two of three criteria: more than A$500mn ($324mn) of annual revenues, over A$1bn of gross assets, 500 or more employees. Group 2 companies will have lower thresholds — above A$200mn of revenues, $500mn of assets and 250 employees — and will start reporting from the financial year starting on 1 July 2026. Reporting for group 3 entities — those with more than A$50mn of revenues, $25mn of assets and 100 employees — will begin from 1 July 2027. The 1 January 2025 start date might be pushed further to 1 July 2025, if the bill does not become law before 2 December. It will now be debated in parliament and needs to pass both houses, the Senate and the House of Representatives, before receiving royal assent. Its approval will support more investment in renewable energy as well as help companies and investors manage climate risks, the government said. Companies are currently not required to report their scope 3 emissions under Australia's National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting Act, which is used to measure and report GHG emissions and energy production and consumption. Scope 3 can include emissions within supply chains that occur inside or outside Australia, such as emissions from the combustion of Australian coal or LNG exported to other countries. By Juan Weik Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Baltimore bridge collapse to raise retail fuel prices


27/03/24
News
27/03/24

Baltimore bridge collapse to raise retail fuel prices

Houston, 27 March (Argus) — The collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, Maryland, is more likely to increase regional gasoline prices than diesel due to additional freight costs and certain route restrictions. Suppliers in the region have so far signaled that the effect on broader markets will be minimal, but regional prices will likely rise, especially as peak summer demand season begins with Memorial Day weekend in late May. The bridge closure could pose more problems for gasoline supply than diesel, since gasoline cannot be transported through the Fort McHenry (I-95) and Baltimore Harbor (I-895) tunnels — the two other major roads that cross the Patapsco River at Baltimore — while there are no restrictions on diesel, according to the Maryland Transportation Authority (MTA). Fuel wholesaler Global Partners said yesterday that it would like to see hours of service waivers for trucking in the region to minimize fuel supply disruption to customers, but the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) is yet to issue one. Elevated retail prices are likely to be limited to the immediate Baltimore area but could spill over into neighboring markets should trucking markets remain tight due to rerouting, market sources told Argus . Fuel markets in eastern Maryland can be supplied by PBF's 171,000 b/d Delaware City, Delaware, refinery and two further plants in Pennsylvania — Monroe Energy's 190,000 b/d Trainer refinery and PBF's 160,000 b/d Paulsboro refinery. To the north, United Refining runs a 65,000 b/d plant in Warren, Pennsylvania, and along the Atlantic coast Phillips 66 operates the 259,000 b/d Bayway refinery in Linden, New Jersey. PBF, Monroe and United did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether the bridge collapse is affecting refinery operations. Phillips 66 declined to comment on commercial activities. Still, the five nearby refineries — representing all the Atlantic coast's 850,000 b/d of crude processing capacity — are unlikely to see their operations curtailed by limits in shipping products to Maryland. With no refinery in the state of Maryland, most fuels are delivered to Baltimore by Gulf coast refiners on the Colonial Pipeline. Global Partners, which operates a terminal just west of the collapsed bridge, said yesterday it is primarily supplied by the pipeline and expects product flows to continue. Several terminals in the Baltimore Harbor and the nearby Port Salisbury can also receive small vessels and barges of road fuels from Delaware and Pennsylvania, according to the Maryland Energy Administration (MEA). The Port of Baltimore — which remains closed since the collapse — took delivery of 24,000 b/d of gasoline and under 2,000 b/d of distillates from barges and small vessels in 2019, about three percent of the Atlantic coast's refining capacity. "A closure of the Port of Baltimore while the Colonial Pipeline is open would not significantly disrupt fuel supply," the MEA wrote in a 2022 analysis of liquid fuels supply in the state. By Nathan Risser Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

US breaks $79/bl ceiling in latest SPR purchase


27/03/24
News
27/03/24

US breaks $79/bl ceiling in latest SPR purchase

Washington, 27 March (Argus) — President Joe Biden's administration has exceeded a price ceiling that has guided when the US government would buy crude to refill the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), with the latest crude purchase hitting a price of $81.32/bl. The US Department of Energy (DOE) six months ago adopted a new strategy for replenishing the SPR, with a plan to use consistent monthly purchases to replace some of the 180mn bl of crude that Biden sold from the reserve in 2022 after the start of the Russia-Ukraine conflict. For months, DOE has said it would continue to buy crude so long as it was a "good deal for taxpayers," which the agency defined as a purchase price not to exceed $79/bl. But the agency's latest crude purchase, for nearly 2.8mn bl of sour crude for delivery in September, came at a cost of $225.6mn, an average price of $81.34/bl, according to data DOE recently published on its website. The crude contracts went to Macquarie Commodities Trading, Sunoco Partners Marketing & Terminals and Total's Atlantic Trading & Marketing. DOE, asked for comment about why it purchased crude in excess of its price target, said there would "likely be news coming later today." Before this week, the administration had largely adhered to its $79/bl price target to buy 24.7mn bl of crude for delivery to the SPR from January through August, with the exception of a $79.10/bl purchase for January delivery. DOE reiterated the price ceiling on 14 March, when it announced a new solicitation to buy crude, and last year had called off multiple crude solicitations when prices came in too high. DOE has previously increased its price ceiling based on shifts in the oil market. DOE in 2022 had initially targeted a purchase price of $67-$72/bl, resulting in the purchase of 6.3mn bl of crude last summer at an average price of $72.67/bl. But after rising prices put that target out of reach, DOE raised its price ceiling to $79/bl. The SPR held 363mn bl of crude as of 22 March, according to federal data. By the end of this year, as a result of crude purchases, the reserve is expected to "be back to essentially where we would have been had we not sold during the invasion of Ukraine," US energy secretary Jennifer Granholm said on 20 March, after accounting for the cancellation of 140mn bl of congressional mandated crude sales that were scheduled through 2031. With the latest crude purchase, DOE will have signed contracts to buy 32.4mn bl of crude at an average price of nearly $77/bl, of which more than 19mn bl has yet to be delivered to the SPR. Another 20mn bl of crude that oil companies and traders borrowed from the SPR in 2022 is set to be returned by year-end, which would push inventories in the reserve to above 400mn bl. By Chris Knight Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

South Sudan crude output halves on pipeline blockage


27/03/24
News
27/03/24

South Sudan crude output halves on pipeline blockage

London, 27 March (Argus) — South Sudan's crude production has almost halved to around 80,000 b/d because of a blockage at a pipeline in war-torn Sudan, South Sudan's oil ministry undersecretary William Anyak Deng told Argus today. A blockage along the Chinese-led Petrodar Pipeline is currently preventing around 100,000 b/d of South Sudan's heavy sweet Dar Blend grade from reaching Sudan's Bashayer terminal on the Red Sea for export, Deng said. But production of South Sudan's medium sweet Nile Blend grade has not been impacted, as this is transported to Bashayer through the separate Greater Nile oil pipeline which remains online, he said. His comments come after Sudan earlier this month warned major oil exporting companies in South Sudan that his country could no longer carry out its obligation to transport their crude . Dar Petroleum Operating Company (DPOC) — a consortium including China's state-controlled CNPC and Sinopec and Malaysia's state-owned Petronas — produces Dar Blend but has had to all but cease output, Deng said. Nile Blend production is split between the South Sudan-based firms Sudd Petroleum Operating Company (SPOC) and Greater Pioneer Operating Company (GPOC) and currently running at around 80,000 b/d, he added. South Sudan's crude production stood at around 150,000 b/d in February, according to Argus estimates. The blockage is a result of gelling issues — solidifying crude — in the Petrodar Pipeline, which Sudanese and South Sudanese engineers are struggling to resolve. This is because of a lack of diesel that is used to heat the crude or dilute it to help it flow, Deng said. "We are working to resolve the problem right now. There is mechanical work that is ongoing, we are trying to flush out the oil," he added. But the pipeline has been suffering from leaks and pressure drops for months, with repairs complicated by the ongoing civil war in Sudan between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. Deng said it was becoming increasingly difficult to get permission from the warring parties in Sudan to move workers, equipment and spare parts to maintain infrastructure. He also said South Sudan has been sending diesel to Sudan to help with repair work given the closure of Sudan's 100,000 b/d Khartoum refinery which has come under repeated fire since the civil war began last year. Sudan also typically produces around 50,000 b/d of mostly Nile Blend crude, but this is thought to have been impacted by the civil war. Crude exports from Sudan's Bashayer port averaged 130,000 b/d in 2023 and hit 168,000 b/d in January, according to Kpler. But exports have only averaged about 75,000 b/d since February. Landlocked South Sudan is entirely reliant on Sudan to export its crude and depends on oil sales for more than 90pc of government revenues. Any prolonged disruption to exports would put the country's economy in a precarious position. By Aydin Calik Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Grupo Carso expande su huella en energía


27/03/24
News
27/03/24

Grupo Carso expande su huella en energía

Mexico City, 27 March (Argus) — En los últimos años Grupo Carso, dirigido por Carlos Slim, ha expandido sus operaciones en el sector de petróleo y gas natural, destacándose como uno de los pocos operadores que han fortalecido su presencia a pesar de las restricciones del presidente mexicano Andrés Manuel López Obrador a la inversión del sector privado. A medida que los independientes y las grandes empresas petroleras han empezado a cerrar sus negocios en medio de la falta de nuevas oportunidades en subastas de la fase de exploración y producción, el Grupo Carso ha adquirido dos de los mayores contratos de aguas someras en los últimos 12 meses y ha expresado interés en hacer nuevas adquisiciones. Durante una conferencia de prensa de cuatro horas en febrero, Slim confirmó el interés de la empresa en desempeñar "un papel más importante en el sector de los hidrocarburos y, finalmente, participar en los productos petroquímicos." Slim, la persona más rica de México y director de un conglomerado que abarca desde las telecomunicaciones hasta la minería, también expresó su interés por "ser socio de alguien con experiencia" y por aumentar la participación de la empresa en el operador independiente estadounidense Talos Energy. La división de energía de Grupo Carso, Carso Energy, tenía un papel marginal en el sector aguas arriba de México antes de esta administración, con derechos de producción y exploración de dos bloques terrestres asegurados tras la reforma energética de 2014. A pesar de que los contratos se adjudicaron en 2017, los bloques 12 y 13 de Veracruz siguen en fase de exploración en medio de la falta de equipos de perforación disponibles y la presencia del crimen organizado en la zona, que ha impedido el acceso al emplazamiento, el operador informó al regulador de petróleo CNH el pasado diciembre. Pero los dos bloques terrestres son pequeños en comparación con los bloques de aguas poco profundas que Grupo Carso compró el año pasado. En septiembre, Grupo Carso completó la compra por $124 millones de una acción de 49.9pc en la filial mexicana de Talos Energy, involucrada también en el mega yacimiento de aguas superficiales de Zama que se está desarrollando con la paraestatal Pemex. Con un pico pronosticado de producción de 180,000 b/d de crudo para 2026, el yacimiento sería el segundo campo de producción de crudo más importante de México según las cifras de enero. El pasado diciembre, Carso Energy llegó a un acuerdo de $530 millones para adquirir el bloque de aguas someras 4 del conglomerado mexicano Petrobal en la cuenca sureste. El bloque es el tercer contrato de producción de crudo más alto, con una producción de 11,784 b/d en enero, según la CNH. Inversiones en gas En el sector del gas, Carso Energy también opera el gasoducto de gas natural Sasabe-Samalayuca de 472mn cf/d y es socio en las líneas estadounidenses de interconexión Waha-Presidio y Waha-San Elizario. Pero mientras que la mayoría de las empresas del sector de la energía han visto un colapso de las oportunidades de inversión durante la administración de López Obrador, el Grupo Carso parece ser una de las pocas empresas del sector privado con las que el presidente permitirá que las empresas estatales Pemex y CFE hagan negocios. CFE adjudicó directamente un nuevo contrato de gasoducto al operador en diciembre del año pasado, con un acuerdo para ampliar la línea de gas Sasabe-Samalayuca de 416km y 472mn cf/d de Sasabe, Sonora a Mexicali, Baja California. López Obrador, a menudo crítico de las empresas del sector privado dentro del sector de la energía, incluso ha elogiado el papel creciente de Slim en el mercado del petróleo y el gas, celebrando su adquisición del contrato Petrobal por permitirle "permanecer en manos mexicanas." Mirando hacia el futuro, los profundos bolsillos del Grupo Carso podrían convertirlo en un socio potencial para desarrollar el campo de gas de aguas profundas de Lakach tras la decisión de New Fortress Energy de retirarse el pasado mes de noviembre. Pero el entorno de bajos precios del gas podría complicar el proyecto en el que Pemex ya ha invertido $1.4 mil millones, mientras que la falta de experiencia de Carso en aguas profundas plantea preguntas sobre su viabilidad como socio. Carso Energy representó sólo 1.6pc de los Ps55.4 mil millones ($3.29 mil millones) totales de ventas del Grupo Carso durante el cuarto trimestre del año pasado, pero la estrategia de adquisición del grupo y el estatus favorecido frente a la administración podrían ver esa cuota aumentar en los próximos años. Por Rebecca Conan Proyectos de energía de Carso Proyecto Tipo de proyecto Tamaño/capacidad Bloque 12 E&P en tierra Fase de exploración Bloque 13 E&P en tierra Fase de exploración Zama E&P en aguas someras 180,000 b/d crudo en 2026 Bloque 4 E&P en aguas someras 11,784 b/d crudo en enero Sasabe-Samalayuca Gasoducto 472mn cf/d Waha-Presidio Gasoducto 1.4 Bcf/d Waha-San Elizario Gasoducto 1.1 Bcf/d Grupo Carso Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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