Viewpoint: CPC Blend exports up, Urals demand firm

  • : Crude oil
  • 18/12/21

Rising export availability of Caspian light sour CPC Blend in 2019 will need continued strong demand from Asia-Pacific. Tight global sour crude balances are set to keep demand for Russian medium sour Urals firm in the first half of the year.

Exports of CPC Blend averaged 1.31mn b/d in January-November, up by 11pc from the same period in 2017, according to data from the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC). And exports are set to continue rising into next year — CPC Blend exports are scheduled at just over 1.42mn b/d in January, down by less than 1pc from December's 1.44mn b/d, which would mark a fresh record-high if final exports reach that total.

Kazakhstan's crude exports should remain steady at an average 1.4mn b/d next year. Production is forecast to rise by over 2pc to 1.84mn b/d, driven by a 23pc rise in production at the 13bn bl giant offshore Kashagan field, and a 5pc rise in output from the Tengiz field, both of which feed into CPC Blend.

Rising export availability is prompting marketers of CPC Blend to place supplies beyond the grade's home export region of the Mediterranean. Flows of Caspian light sour CPC Blend to Asia-Pacific averaged 346,000 b/d in the second half of 2018 — to mid-December — up from 200,000 b/d in the first half of the year. Exports in November reached their highest since at least 2015 at 460,000 b/d. Volumes going to Asia-Pacific have climbed as voyages to the Americas have dropped off — just 38,000 b/d of CPC Blend sailed for the Americas in July-November, down from 51,000 b/d in January-June.

Asia-Pacific buying interest in CPC Blend used to be limited to refiners in South Korea, Japan and India that can handle the grade's high content of corrosive mercaptans. However, China has shown increasing interest in the grade and this may continue into next year. Around 125,000 b/d of new naphtha reforming capacity has recently come online in China's Shandong province, and this may be prompting demand for the naphtha-rich grade. Chinese refiners have directly received a 135,000t shipment of CPC Blend in November and October, breaking an almost three-year hiatus.

CPC Blend sailed for Linggi, Malaysia, at a steady rate of around 35,000 b/d across June-November, with no prior voyages since at least 2015, Argus tracking shows. Linggi is a common location for ship-to-ship transfers for onward voyages deeper into Asia-Pacific. Unipec and ChemChina have previously fixed tankers on this route.

South Korea — the region's principal buyer of CPC Blend — increased its purchases as the country sought naphtha-rich crude to replace Iranian condensate supply to feed its petrochemical sector. Naphtha can compete with condensate as a feedstock in petrochemical cracking units. South Korea stopped imports from Iran in July, ahead of the reimposition of US sanctions, and purchased 173,000 b/d of CPC Blend in July-November, up from 140,000 b/d in January-June.

Likewise, India cut down Iranian imports from 735,000 b/d in July to 300,000 b/d in November — as the 5 November sanctions loomed — and ramped up CPC Blend purchases from 12,000 b/d in the first half of the year to over 70,000 b/d in July-November.

South Korea, India, and China — as well as Taiwan, Japan, Italy, Greece, and Turkey — received waivers from the US government to continue imports from Iran, but only for up to 180 days. Continued logistical uncertainties surrounding insurance and shipping are likely to prevent a surge in Iranian crude purchases in early 2019, and any Iranian imports to those countries will fall as the 3 May waiver expiry approaches.

With Iranian exports set to remain depressed next year, demand could improve for alternative sour grades — such as Russian Urals.

Lower availabilities of sour crude — as well as lower exports from Iran — have pushed fuel oil margins to multi-year highs in both Europe and Asia-Pacific. This in turn helped push Urals values to fresh highs. Baltic Urals rose to a five-year high of a 40¢/bl premium against Dated on 23 November; 80,000t Black Sea Urals cargoes hit a three-year high of a 20¢/bl premium to Dated on 16 November.

This could be compounded as global sour crude supplies will again be restricted next year, after Opec and its non-Opec partners agreed to fresh production cuts in their meeting in Vienna on 7 December. Opec producers and non-Opec participants in a production restraint deal will aim to remove 1.2mn b/d of output — or around 2.5pc from an October 2018 baseline — from the market over the next six months. Saudi Arabia will account for the bulk of the Opec cuts.

Saudi production will increasingly head to China in 2019. State-owned Aramco signed five new crude supply agreements with Chinese customers to deliver a further 500,000-600,000 b/d to the country, which could further tighten supplies available to Mediterranean buyers.

Russia will contribute to the latest agreement by cutting by 228,000-230,000 b/d from October's post-Soviet record high of 11.4mn b/d, though energy minister Alexander Novak says this will be a "gradual decline," and January production will fall by just 50,000-60,000 b/d.

After Iranian crude, Urals' principal sour crude competitors in the Mediterranean are Iraqi Basrah Light and Kirkuk. Iraq's state-owned marketing firm Somo has allocated around 20pc of its Basrah supplies to Europe next year, broadly in line with 2018 sailings, although it is unclear how much will actually enter the region.

At least four current European buyers of Iraqi crude will receive no term supplies in 2019, and eight regional customers will receive reductions of up to 50pc to their allocations, data compiled by Argus indicate. At least five European lifters' term contracts will be unchanged from 2018 levels, and two will receive higher supplies. These statistics do not account for all European lifters of Iraqi crude.

The reduction in Basrah term supplies comes after Somo contacted several of its European clients to denounce alleged re-selling of Basrah cargoes. It is insisting buyers name a final refinery destination for each cargo. Somo's resale crackdown is likely to result in lower spot availability of the Iraqi grade, which could leave buyers more inclined to purchase alternatives such as Urals.

Sour crude demand will increase further early next year, when Azerbaijan state-owned Socar's 200,000 b/d Star refinery in Turkey reaches full operational capacity. The refinery will run principally on Urals and Kirkuk, as well as Azeri light sweet BTC Blend. The refinery received its first test cargo of Azeri crude in August.


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24/05/03

Chevron’s oily DJ basin buy boosts gas output

Chevron’s oily DJ basin buy boosts gas output

New York, 3 May (Argus) — Chevron's US natural gas production has surged in recent quarters due to its crude-focused acquisition of Denver-based PDC Energy last August, increasing the oil major's exposure to the US gas market months after that market entered an extended price slump. Chevron's US gas production in the first quarter was 2.7 Bcf/d (76mn m3/d), up by 53pc from the year-earlier quarter and the highest since at least 2021, according to company production data. Chevron's total US output rose by 35pc year-over-year to 1.57 b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d), while US crude output increased by 21pc to 779,000 b/d. The acreage Chevron picked up last year in the DJ basin of northeast Colorado and southeast Wyoming has higher gas-oil ratios than the rest of its US portfolio. Chevron mostly focuses US production in the crude-rich Permian basin of west Texas and southeast New Mexico. Since Chevron closed its acquisition of PDC on 7 August, US gas prices have mostly languished in loss-making territory. Prompt-month Nymex gas settlements at the US benchmark Henry Hub from 7 August 2023 to 2 May 2024 averaged $2.46/mmBtu, down from an average of $4.999/mmBtu in the year-earlier period. In a May 2023 conference call over Chevron's acquisition of PDC, chief executive Mike Wirth expressed optimism for the long-run outlook for natural gas, despite the more immediately dim outlook. "There's going to be stronger global demand for gas growth than there will be for oil over the next decade and beyond as the world looks to decarbonize," Wirth said. Despite lower US gas prices, Chevron has captured $600mn in cost savings from the PDC acquisition between capital and operational expenditures, the company told Argus . Crude prices have also been more resilient. Chevron's profit in the first quarter was $5.5bn, down from $6.6bn in the year-earlier quarter, partly due to lower gas prices. US gas prices have been lower this year as unseasonably warm winter weather and resilient production have created an oversupplied US gas market. A government report Thursday showed US gas inventories up by 35pc from the five-year average. By Julian Hast Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Kazakhstan outlines Opec+ compensation plan


24/05/03
24/05/03

Kazakhstan outlines Opec+ compensation plan

London, 3 May (Argus) — Opec+ member Kazakhstan has submitted a plan to Opec detailing how it intends to compensate for producing above its crude production target in the first four months of the year. Kazakhstan and Iraq — which has also submitted a compensation plan — are the Opec+ alliance's largest overproducers and a key reason why the group exceeded its overall production in the first three months of the year . Kazakhstan's energy ministry said it produced above its target by 129,000 b/d in January, 128,000 b/d in February, and 131,000 b/d in March, according to secondary source estimates. Opec secondary sources, of which Argus is one, have yet to formally submit their production estimates for April, but Kazakhstan said it is factoring preliminarily overproduction of 100,000 b/d for April. The ministry said it kept oil production high because of high winter demand for natural gas — much of its gas production is associated and is produced alongside its oil. Kazakhstan said it would start its compensation plan in May with an initial cut of 18,000 b/d below its official target of 1.468mn b/d. It would then stick to its target in June and July before implementing a cut of 131,000 b/d in August, none in September, 299,000 b/d in October, 40,000 b/d in November and zero in December. The cuts have been designed to coincide with scheduled maintenance at the country's key oil fields of Kashagan and Tengiz, the ministry said. Kazakhstan would have to reduce its output by 149,000 b/d in May compared with its March production of 1.599mn b/d to meet its pledge, according to Argus calculations. The compensation plan is set to be adjusted once a final figure for April is available. The plan would be further adjusted to accommodate any change in the Opec+ alliance's output policy — for which a meeting is scheduled to take place on 1 June in Vienna. Opec has been increasing pressure on members exceeding their targets. It called last month on countries that have overproduced to submit detailed compensation plans by the end of April. The Opec+ alliance has implemented a series of cuts — voluntary or collective — worth a combined 5.4mn b/d since October 2022 in a self-described bid to "support the stability and balance of the oil market". The latest round of "voluntary" output reductions by several members came into force in January and is due to run until the end of June. By Aydin Calik and Nader Itayim Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Iraq sets plan to compensate for excess Opec oil output


24/05/03
24/05/03

Iraq sets plan to compensate for excess Opec oil output

Dubai, 3 May (Argus) — Iraq, Opec's second-largest oil producer, has submitted a plan to the Opec secretariat outlining how it will compensate for producing above quota in the first quarter of 2024. The plan indicates that Baghdad will make compensatory cuts from May through to the end of this year, although its breakdown could be tweaked if its April production is again above quota, based on average production estimates issued by the seven Opec secondary sources, including Argus . Opec+'s Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC) said in its 3 April meeting that members that have produced above their quotas so far this year would need to submit plans to compensate for the excess. Iraq and Kazakhstan, which Opec said has also submitted its own compensation plan, have produced the most excess excess volumes in the Opec+ group since the beginning of the year. The JMMC oversees compliance to the coalition's crude production cuts and studies market dynamics. Iraq produced 194,000 b/d above target in January, and overshot by 217,000 b/d and 193,000 b/d in February and March, respectively. To compensate for this, Baghdad plans to produce 50,000 b/d below its quota between May and September, 100,000 b/d below quota for October and November, and 152,000 b/d below its quota for December. Iraq has been working to a quota of 4mn b/d since the start of the year, including two rounds of voluntary cuts it made in April and November last year. Baghdad will submit its crude production figure for April later this week, it said. Any extra volumes produced will also be factored into the country's compensation plan. To meet obligations, Baghdad says it will cap its crude burn at 75,000 b/d and maintain refining intake to between 400,000 b/d and 500,000 b/d through to the end of this year, according to Iraq's Opec national representative Mohammed Adnan Ibrahim Al-Najjar. But Iraq has yet to decide whether it will extend a 3.3mn b/d cap on exports, in place since April , beyond the second half, as it will depend on "Opec+ agreements [in the June meeting] and [the needs of] Iraq's economy over the coming months," the oil ministry told Argus last week. When needs must With the summer season around the corner in the Mideast Gulf region, Iraq has pushed the majority of its compensation into the last three months of the year. Iraq in summer often experiences extreme heatwaves resulting in a major spike in electricity demand. Power shortages during the summer season have fuelled political unrest in Iraq in recent years. To strike a balance between its Opec+ commitments and avoid similar scenarios this year, Iraq says it will import higher levels of gas from neighbouring Iran, with Baghdad also beginning to benefit from electricity supply from Jordan through a newly-established power line which became operational at the beginning of April. Iran and Iraq finalised a five-year supply agreement at the end of March, which will see Tehran send "up to 50mn m³/d" of gas to Iraq, Iraq's electricity minister Ziad Ali Fadel said. But Iraq's persistent overproduction, which has drawn scrutiny within Opec+, might be difficult to address, especially as Iraq blames it on its inability to oversee production in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region in the north of the country. Most Iraqi Kurdish crude output is directed to local refineries or sold on the black market following the closure of the export pipeline that links oil fields in northern Iraq to the Turkish port of Ceyhan just over a year ago. Iraq's federal oil ministry says its Kurdish counterpart has stopped providing production data, but on 3 May said it estimates Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) crude production to be between 40,000 b/d and 50,000 b/d. Meanwhile, Iraq's oil minister Hayyan Abdulghani on 2 May announced that two joint Baghdad-Erbil committees have been formed to resolve the issue of contracts between Erbil and the international oil companies operating in the Kurdistan region. By Bachar Halabi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US regulator slams executive over Opec 'collusion'


24/05/02
24/05/02

US regulator slams executive over Opec 'collusion'

Washington, 2 May (Argus) — US antitrust regulators for the first time took action against a leading US oil executive over his alleged "collusion" with Opec, but the producers' alliance itself was not a target of investigation. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) today issued a proposed consent order barring former Pioneer Natural Resources chief executive Scott Sheffield from joining the board of ExxonMobil following its $59.5bn takeover of Pioneer. FTC accused Sheffield of organizing "anti-competitive coordinated output reductions between and among US crude oil producers" and members of Opec and the broader Opec+ alliance. "Opec and Opec+ are cartels that exist to control global crude oil production and reserves," FTC said. The specific charges against Sheffield relate to the outspoken executive's frequent public appearances where he opined on US companies' desired production levels, his meetings and frequent communications with Opec officials since 2017 and his advocacy of drastic production cuts by US companies as global demand fell sharply at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020. Opec under then secretary general Mohammed Barkindo began active outreach to independent US producers, starting in March 2017 with private dinner discussions held on the sidelines of IHS CERAWeek conferences in Houston, Texas. Barkindo hosted similar discussions at CERAWeek in 2018 and 2019, in addition to hosting some of the US companies' chief executives at Opec seminars in Vienna. FTC references Sheffield's public comments following those meetings and alleges that Sheffield kept in frequent touch with Opec officials via messaging service WhatsApp and other means to discuss production levels and prices. Barkindo at the time said that production cuts and prices were never on the agenda of his meetings with the US shale producers and that his organization wanted to better understand the US companies' technological innovation and to compare market outlooks and forecast models. Barkindo in the same time frame held similar discussions with major US hedge funds and money managers. US oil executives polled by Argus in 2017-20 also said that their discussions with Barkindo and other Opec officials revolved around market fundamentals. The US oil industry broadly felt that it was benefiting from a policy of production cuts Opec was implementing as it supported prices at a time when the US domestic production and crude exports grew uninterrupted. Former president Donald Trump took credit for engineering a breakthrough agreement in April 2020 to remove more than 10mn b/d of global crude supply by brokering an agreement between Saudi Arabia, Russia and other Opec+ producers. Even without prodding from Trump, US producers cut back production cuts in 2020 as transportation fuel demand and prices fell sharply in the first months of the pandemic. FTC singled out Sheffield for allegedly coordinating his company's production levels with Opec. Sheffield "held repeated, private conversations with high-ranking Opec representatives assuring them that Pioneer and its Permian basin rivals were working hard to keep oil output artificially low," according to the FTC order. Sheffield, who helped found Pioneer and was its longtime chairman, served as chief executive from 1997 to 2016 and from 2019 through 2023. He remains on the company's board, serving as special adviser to the chief executive since 1 January. The son of an oil executive, Sheffield attended high school in Tehran, Iran. Pioneer shrugged off what it termed a "fundamental misunderstanding" of global oil markets and said that FTC misread "the nature and intent" of Sheffield's actions. Opec declined to comment on FTC's action against Sheffield. FTC is so far the only US regulator to set sights on Opec, even if indirectly. President Joe Biden in 2021 separately tasked FTC with leading an investigation into whether there is price manipulation in gasoline markets. Biden, like many of his predecessors at a time of high gasoline prices, in 2022 accused Opec of uncompetitive behavior in oil markets and expressed support for US legislation allowing antitrust action against the organization by the US Department of Justice. But that acrimony has largely dissipated after global oil and US gasoline prices fell in 2023 from unusually high levels in the previous year. US Congress has not taken significant steps to advance the anti-Opec legislation since 2022. By Haik Gugarats Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Canadian rail workers vote to launch strike: Correction


24/05/02
24/05/02

Canadian rail workers vote to launch strike: Correction

Corrects movement of grain loadings from a year earlier in final paragraph. Washington, 2 May (Argus) — Workers at the two major Canadian railroads could go on strike as soon as 22 May now that members of the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC) have authorized a strike, potentially causing widespread disruption to shipments of commodities such as crude, coal and grain. A strike could disrupt rail traffic not only in Canada but also in the US and Mexico because trains would not be able to leave, nor could shipments enter into Canada. This labor action could be far more impactful than recent strikes because it would affect Canadian National (CN) and Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) at the same time. Union members at Canadian railroads have gone on strike individually in the past, which has left one of the two carriers to continue operating and handle some of their competitor's freight. But TCRC members completed a vote yesterday about whether to initiate a strike action at each carrier. The union represents about 9,300 workers employed at the two railroads. Roughly 98pc of union members that participated voted in favor of a strike beginning as early as 22 May, the union said. The union said talks are at an impasse. "After six months of negotiations with both companies, we are no closer to reaching a settlement than when we first began, TCRC president Paul Boucher said. Boucher warned that "a simultaneous work stoppage at both CN and CPKC would disrupt supply chains on a scale Canada has likely never experienced." He added that the union does not want to provoke a rail crisis and wants to avoid a work stoppage. The union has argued that the railroads' proposals would harm safety practices. It has also sought an improved work-life balance. But CN and CPKC said the union continues to reject their proposals. CPKC "is committed to negotiating in good faith and responding to our employees' desire for higher pay and improved work-life balance, while respecting the best interests of all our railroaders, their families, our customers, and the North American economy." CN said it wants a contract that addresses the work life balance and productivity, benefiting the company and employees. But even when CN "proposed a solution that would not touch duty-rest rules, the union has rejected it," the railroad said. Canadian commodity volume has fallen this year with only rail shipments of chemicals, petroleum and petroleum products, and non-metallic minerals rising, Association of American Railroads (AAR) data show. Volume data includes cars loaded in the US by Canadian carriers. Coal traffic dropped by 11pc during the 17 weeks ended on 27 April compared with a year earlier, AAR data show. Loadings of motor vehicles and parts have fallen by 5.2pc. CN and CPKC grain loadings fell by 4.3pc from a year earlier, while shipment of farm products and food fell by 9.3pc. By Abby Caplan Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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