Citgo gains independence as sales threat looms

  • Spanish Market: Crude oil, Oil products
  • 30/07/20

Venezuela's US refining subsidiary has spent the last year working toward operational independence even as it resists separation from its parent.

The US refiner, a crown jewel of Venezuelan national oil company PdV, was forced last year to operate without its sponsor. US sanctions prohibited business transactions with Venezuela's oil sector in order to support the opposition government vying for power against President Nicolas Maduro.

Venezuela and the 770,000 b/d refiner in the US Gulf coast and midcontinent were so intertwined that the country's creditors convinced US courts that Citgo was an alter ego of the Venezuelan government. That decision, along with the use of the refiner as collateral for bonds, has imperiled Venezuelan ownership of the company.

Citgo bond and annual report documents describe reducing dependency on PdV for crude supplies and equipment contracts. Citgo modified refineries to run more US crude and restored relationships with other oil companies.

Pure trading companies and PdV supplied nearly two thirds of Citgo crude purchases in 2018. By the end of 2019, pure traders fell to 28pcwhile direct transactions with oil companies accounted for almost 60pc of crude supply, Citgo's opposition-appointed board said. The annual report touted this as re-establishing connections with "renowned crude producer companies." But it also underlines the abrupt scramble triggered by sanctions through 2021 that cut off a 300,000 b/d supply contract with PdV.

The changes have made the company's three refineries both more resilient and potentially less entangled with PdV if the company faces a forced sale. But the facilities still have challenges. Profits fell by 70pc from 2018 to 2019, to $246mn. The board attributed the slump to narrowing crude discounts — especially compared to heavy Canadian purchased in the previous year — and lower gasoline margins. The refiner reported a first quarter loss, like all other US refiners, as a demand shock created by efforts to contain the Covid-19 pandemic sent fuel prices plummeting at the end of the period. Citgo supplies — but does not own or operate — a branded retailer network that has faced increased pressure from grocers and other large retailers, the company said.

Three complex refineries

Each of the refineries boast complex equipment able to produce fuels from cheap but difficult-to-process crudes.

Citgo's largest refinery processes the lowest relative portion of heavy sour crude. The 425,000 b/d Lake Charles, Louisiana, refinery can process 145,000 b/d of heavy sour supplies, or about 36pc of maximum capacity. Lake Charles processed about 87,000 b/d of Midland-priced crudes in 2018 — nearly all of the 101,000 b/d of Midland crude the company purchased that year. Keystone Marketlink and the Permian Express pipeline systems combined to supply more than half of the refinery's crude over the past three years. Lake Charles also connects to the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (Loop) and terminal complexes in St James, Louisiana, and Houston, Texas.

Gasoline makes up most of the Lake Charles refinery's fuel production, at an average 45pc. The refinery has the highest identified yield of jet fuel in the Citgo system, at about 18pc of supply. Diesel production is on the lower end of Citgo refineries at around 25pc. Lake Charles has direct access to the massive Colonial Pipeline system moving fuels through the southeast and up the Atlantic coast into the New York Harbor market. Marine facilities allow access to other domestic or overseas markets.

The 177,000 b/d Lemont, Illinois, refinery processes 90,000 b/d of Canadian heavy crude. The slate and location offer a lucrative combination, though potentially never more so than in 2018. Extensive refinery maintenance, rising output and limited outlets for Canadian crude helped to produce large stockpiles and record deep discounts on the country's heavy exports. The company notes in an annual report ongoing efforts to win back direct business with Canadian suppliers. Lemont alone reported $739mn in profit before interest and taxes that year. The refinery has been the most consistently profitable for Citgo in recent years, and the only facility reporting a profit in the first quarter of 2020.

Lemont relies on Enbridge pipeline systems for 95pc of its crude supplies, and can move products via midcontinent waterways to the US Gulf coast or Great Lakes. Almost half of Lemont's production is gasoline, and a third of it diesel. The refinery produces just 1pc, or about 1,000 b/d, of jet fuel. Benzene, Toluene and mixed xylenes, plus solvents and unspecified other industrial products, round out production.

The Corpus Christi refinery was considered the most dependent upon Venezuelan supplies before last year's sourcing overhaul. Heavy crude now makes up about 60pc of its full run rate, following a 10,000 b/d expansion of the refinery's ability to process light, sweet crudes last year. Light, sweet crudes can fill more than a third of the refinery's slate. Marine deliveries supply most of the refinery's crude, though Corpus also takes production from the nearby Eagle Ford fields by barge and truck.

The refinery reported the highest share of diesel production of the three Citgo refineries, at 35pc. Gasoline makes up about 47pc of the facility's fuel production, and petrochemicals and industrial products fill the remaining 18pc. The refinery lacks pipeline access to major fuel markets and reports the smallest profit of the three refineries over the past two years.


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26/04/24

High inventories pressure Brazil biodiesel prices

High inventories pressure Brazil biodiesel prices

Sao Paulo, 26 April (Argus) — Logistical differentials for Brazilian biodiesel contracts to supply fuel distributors in May and June fell from March and April values, reflecting higher inventories and a bumper crop of soybeans for crushing, which could increase vegetable oil production. The formula for the logistics differential of plants includes the quote of the soybean oil futures contract in Chicago, its differential for export cargoes in the port of Paranagua and the Brazilian real-US dollar exchange rate. It is the portion in the pricing linked to producers' margin. Negotiations for May and June started with plants seeking higher values to recover part of the losses incurred by unscheduled stops , the result of retailers' delays in collecting biodiesel. But the supply glut has not abated, leading to a drop in prices. With higher inventories in the market, fuel distributors stuck close to acquisition goals established by oil regulator ANP for the May-June period. Sales are expected to gain traction over the next two months, as blended diesel demand traditionally gets a seasonal boost from agricultural-sector consumption linked to grain and sugarcane crops. The distribution sector expects an extension of the current supply-demand imbalance, exacerbated by significant volumes of imported diesel at ports and lower-than-expected demand. The situation has generated concern among many participants, who see this trend as a potential sign of non-compliance with the biodiesel blending mandate. ANP data show that the compliance rate with the Brazilian B14 diesel specification dropped to 83.4pc in April from 95.2pc in March, reaching the lowest level since the 2016 start of monitoring. Non-compliance with the minimum biodiesel content accounted for 67pc of the infractions recorded during the period compared to a historical average rate of 47pc. The recent end to a special tax regime for fuel importing companies offered by northern Amapa state's secretary of finance should end a significant source of diesel price distortions and help rebalance supply in the country. Variations The steepest decline in differentials took place in northeastern Bahia state, where premiums for the period ranged from R600-830/m³ (44.35-61.35¢/USG), down from R730-1,020/m³ in the March-April period, according to a recent Argus survey. In the northern microregion of Goias-Tocantins states, the premium range also dropped by around R142/m³ to R300-535/m³ from R440-680/m³. By Alexandre Melo Brazil biodiesel plant differentials R/m³ May/June March/April ± Low High Low High Rio Grande do Sul 110 380 280 450 -120 Sorriso-Nova Mutum 50 340 220 350 -90 Cuiaba-Rondonopolis 80 405 280 450 -123 Northern of Goiás-Tocantins 300 535 440 680 -142 Southern of Goias 350 500 450 650 -125 Parana-Santa Catarina 150 450 400 480 -140 Bahia 600 830 730 1,120 -210 Source: Argus survey Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Lyondell Houston refinery to run at 95pc in 2Q


26/04/24
26/04/24

Lyondell Houston refinery to run at 95pc in 2Q

Houston, 26 April (Argus) — LyondellBasell plans to run its 264,000 b/d Houston, Texas, refinery at average utilization rates of 95pc in the second quarter and may convert its hydrotreaters to petrochemical production when the plant shuts down in early 2025. The company's sole crude refinery ran at an average 79pc utilization rate in the first quarter due to planned maintenance on a coking unit , the company said in earnings released today . "We are evaluating options for the potential reuse of the hydrotreaters at our Houston refinery to purify recycled and renewable cracker feedstocks," chief executive Peter Vanacker said on a conference call today discussing earnings. Lyondell said last year a conversion would feed the company's two 930,000 metric tonnes (t)/yr steam crackers at its Channelview petrochemicals complex. The company today said it plans to make a final investment decision on the conversion in 2025. Hydrotreater conversions — such as one Chevron completed last year at its 269,000 b/d El Segundo, California, refinery — allow the unit to produce renewable diesel, which creates renewable naphtha as a byproduct. Renewable naphtha can be used as a gasoline blending component, steam cracker feed or feed for hydrogen producing units, according to engineering firm Topsoe. Lyondell last year said the Houston refinery will continue to run until early 2025, delaying a previously announced plan to stop crude processing by the end of 2023. By Nathan Risser Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US M&A deals dip after record 1Q: Enverus


26/04/24
26/04/24

US M&A deals dip after record 1Q: Enverus

New York, 26 April (Argus) — US oil and gas sector mergers and acquisitions (M&A) are likely to slow for the rest of the year following a record $51bn in deals in the first quarter, consultancy Enverus says. Following an unprecedented $192bn of upstream deals last year, the Permian shale basin continued to dominate first-quarter M&A as firms competed for the remaining high-quality inventory on offer. Acquisitions were led by Diamondback Energy's $26bn takeover of Endeavor Energy Resources. Other private operators, such as Mewbourne Oil and Fasken Oil & Ranch, would be highly sought after if they decided to put themselves up for sale, Enverus says. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU adopts Net-Zero Industry Act


26/04/24
26/04/24

EU adopts Net-Zero Industry Act

London, 26 April (Argus) — Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) have adopted Net-Zero Industry Act, which plans to allocate funds towards the production of net-zero technologies. The act provides a pathway to scale up development and production of technologies that are critical towards meeting the EU's recommendation of net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 2050. This would include solar panels, electrolysers and fuel cells, batteries, heat pumps, onshore and offshore wind turbines, grid technologies, sustainable biomethane, as well as carbon capture and storage (CCS). The act is designed to help simplify the regulatory framework for the manufacture of these technologies in order to incentivise European production and supply. It also sets a target of 40pc production within the EU for its annual "deployment needs" of these technologies by 2030. Time limits will be instated on permit grants for manufacturing projects, at 12 months if the manufacturing capacity is under 1 GW/yr and 18 months for those above that. It will introduce time limits of nine months for "net-zero strategic projects" of less than 1 GW/yr and 12 months for those above. This is further complemented by the introduction of net-zero strategic projects for CO2 storage, to help support the development of CCS technology. The act was met with positive reactions from the European Community Shipowners' Association (ECSA), which said the bill will set the benchmark for member states to match 40pc of the deployment needs for clean fuels for shipping with production capacity. ECSA said the Net-Zero Industry Act will be instrumental in supporting the shipping industry to meet targets set under FuelEU Maritime regulations , which are set to come into effect next year. By Hussein Al-Khalisy Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

New technologies aim to boost SAF production


26/04/24
26/04/24

New technologies aim to boost SAF production

London, 26 April (Argus) — A likely rise in global demand for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), underpinned by mandates for its use, is encouraging development of new production pathways. While hydrotreated esters and fatty acids synthesised paraffinic kerosine (HEFA-SPK) remains the most common type of SAF available today, much more production will be needed. The International Air Transport Association (Iata) estimated SAF output at around 500,000t in 2023, and expects this to rise to 1.5mn t this year, but that only meets around 0.5pc of global jet fuel demand. An EU-wide SAF mandate will come into effect in 2025 that will set a minimum target of 2pc, with a sub-target for synthetic SAF starting from 2030. This week the UK published its domestic SAF mandate , also targeting a 2pc SAF share in 2025 and introducing a power-to-liquid (PtL) obligation from 2028. New pathways involve different technology to unlock use of a wider feedstock base. US engineering company Honeywell said this week its hydrocracking technology, Fischer-Tropsch (FT) Unicracking, can be used to produce SAF from biomass such as crop residue or wood and food waste. Renewable fuels producer DG Fuels will use the technology for its SAF facility in Louisiana, US. The plant will be able to produce 13,000 b/d of SAF starting from 2028, Honeywell said. The company said its SAF technologies — which include ethanol-to-jet , which converts cellulosic ethanol into SAF — have been adopted at more than 50 sites worldwide including Brazil and China. Honeywell is part of the Google and Boeing-backed United Airlines Ventures Sustainable Flight Fund , which is aimed at scaling up SAF production. German alternative fuels company Ineratec said this week it will use South African integrated energy firm Sasol's FT catalysts for SAF production. The catalysts will be used in Ineratec's plants, including a PtL facility it is building in Frankfurt, Germany. The plant will be able to produce e-fuels from green hydrogen and CO2, with a capacity of 2,500 t/yr of e-fuels beginning in 2024. The e-fuels will then be processed into synthetic SAF. Earlier this month , ethanol-to-jet producer LanzaJet said it has received funding from technology giant Microsoft's Climate Innovation Fund, "to continue building its capability and capacity to deploy its sustainable fuels process technology globally". The producer recently signed a licence and engineering agreement with sustainable fuels company Jet Zero Australia to progress development of an SAF plant in north Queensland, Australia. The plant will have capacity of 102mn l/yr of SAF. Polish oil firm Orlen formed a partnership with Japanese electrical engineering company Yakogawa to develop SAF technology . They aim to develop a technological process to synthesise CO2 and hydrogen to form PtL SAF. The SAF will be produced from renewable hydrogen as defined by the recast EU Renewable Energy Directive (RED II) and bio-CO2 from biomass boilers, Orlen told Argus . By Evelina Lungu Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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