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Calif. refinery resupply rule vote postponed

  • : Oil products
  • 25/04/21

California regulators delayed a vote this week on new refinery resupply rules meant to mitigate retail gasoline price spikes, but refiners are still wary that the state is moving to make the most regulated market in the US even tougher.

The California Energy Commission (CEC) had scheduled a vote on refinery resupply rules at its 24 April business meeting but said the meeting is now postponed to allow for additional feedback and consultation with stakeholders.

The draft rules under consideration would require refiners to submit resupply plans to the state at least 120 days before any planned maintenance in September and October that would cause California specification gasoline production to decline by 20,000 b/d for at least 21 days or a total of more than 450,000 bl. Large spikes in California prices occurred in the fall of 2022 and 2023.

The commission is also planning rulemaking this year on minimum inventory requirements to avoid price spikes in the event of unplanned events, as well as possible rules on setting a refiner margin cap.

The timing of the new regulations is precarious, as two major refineries in the state are planning to shut operations within a year. Independent refiner Valero said on 16 April it is planning to shut or re-purpose its 145,000 b/d refinery in Benicia, California and continues to evaluate strategic alternatives for its other refinery in the state – the 85,000 b/d Wilmington facility. In addition, Phillips 66 is planning to shut its 139,000 b/d Los Angeles refinery later this year.

Effort to stop gasoline price spikes

The California rules stem from two pieces of legislation signed by California governor Gavin Newsom known as AB X2-1 and SB X1-2, part of a multi-year effort to mitigate price volatility in the state, after some of the highest gasoline prices ever recorded in the fall of 2022.

US refiners have long opposed the new regulations seeing them as a political attack on the industry, conflicting with other laws and the latest example of an increasingly difficult regulatory environment in the state.

The CEC has conducted workshops to help draft the rules with the participation of labor groups, the refining industry, environmental justice groups, community advocates, and the public. The industry was largely represented by the Western States Petroleum Association (WSPA).

WSPA told the commission that the resupply rule could conflict with existing statutory requirements for refiners not to withhold fuel from the market and could result in market distortions and undesirable price impacts. The rules could also make it hard for Arizona and Nevada to secure needed supplies in the face of regulations expressly favoring Californians' access to fuel, WSPA said.

The rules could also force refiners to use "uneconomic strategies" to secure non-spot market resupplies and additional capital to guarantee inventories that could potentially lead to higher gasoline prices, the group said.

AB X2-1 forbids the CEC from adopting any regulation "unless it finds that the likely benefits to consumers from avoiding price volatility outweigh the potential costs to consumers."

WSPA said it is concerned that the CEC does not "have the facts in front of it to legitimately support such a finding" with respect to imposing the resupply requirement.

Under the draft resupply rules, refiners must show they can secure sufficient supply to ensure that lost gasoline production anticipated during the maintenance does not adversely affect the California transportation fuels market.

The plan must show a resupply volume of at least 85pc of the anticipated lost gasoline production during the maintenance and the resupply volumes must match the seasonal specification of the lost production. The resupply plans could include imports and each barrel of resupply obtained by imports will count as 1.3 barrels of resupply.

In addition, a plan that includes resupply through the purchase or storage of gasoline blendstocks or gasoline blending components must explain how such materials will result in an equivalent amount of California specification gasoline.

Non-compliance could carry a civil penalty of $100,000-$1mn per day.

Refineries with capacity under 30,000 b/d are exempt from the resupply regulation.

The rules would apply to five major refiners operating in the state — Chevron, PBF Energy, Phillips 66, Valero and Marathon. Phillips 66, however, will be closing its Los Angeles refinery by October and converted a refinery in Rodeo, California, to renewable fuels in 2024.

Since the 1980s, 29 refineries in California have been shut or integrated with other refineries that eventually closed or converted to renewable fuels production, according to CEC data. About half of the shut refineries were smaller operations, producing less than 20,000 b/d.

Looking at options

The CEC caused a stir in August 2024 when it released its Transportation Fuels Assessment, which examined policy options to mitigate price spikes and transition away from fossil fuels including the state of California buying and owning refineries. The assessment said this could range from one refinery to all refineries in the state.

But the document also highlighted problems with such a plan, including the high cost of buying refineries, significant legal issues, and the fact that the state has no experience managing complex industrial processes.

California is not currently pursuing this option, state officials said.

Another idea in the Transportation Fuels Assessment involved state-owned product reserves in the north and south of California to allow rapid deployment of fuel when needed. This could include "up to several hundred thousand barrels."

The CEC and the California Air Resources Board are drafting a formal Transportation Fuels Transition Plan which will serve as a road map to move away from fossil fuels. A draft of the report will be released later this year. The Transportation Fuels Assessment and the Transportation Fuels Transition Plan were mandated under SB X1-2.


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25/05/22

Iraq signs integrated energy deal with China’s Geo-Jade

Iraq signs integrated energy deal with China’s Geo-Jade

Dubai, 22 May (Argus) — Iraq's oil ministry has signed an agreement with China's Geo-Jade Petroleum and local firm Basra Crescent to expand the capacity of the 20,000 b/d Tuba oil field and develop a suite of downstream and power assets, in a move that mirrors recent integrated energy deals with international partners. A key component of the South Basrah Integrated Energy Project will be to raise Tuba's production capacity to 100,000 b/d, oil minister Hayan Abdulghani said at the signing ceremony in Baghdad on 21 May. The project will also include processing of up to 50mn ft³/d of associated gas. Downstream components include a 200,000 b/d refinery, a 620,000 t/yr petrochemical plant and a 520,000 t/yr fertilizer facility. A 650MW thermal power plant and a 400MW solar plant will also be part of the project, Abdulghani said. No financial details or project timelines were disclosed. The agreement marks a further step in Geo-Jade's expansion in Iraq, following its successful participation in the country's fifth and sixth licensing rounds. While the company now holds multiple upstream assets in Iraq, it has yet to bring any into production. The deal follows a similar multi-billion dollar agreement signed with TotalEnergies in 2023 , which bundled gas processing, water treatment and solar power with development of the Ratawi field. In February this year, BP signed a major upstream deal with Iraq that also includes power, water and potentially exploration. By Bachar Halabi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Mexican GDP outlook dims on tariffs: IMEF


25/05/21
25/05/21

Mexican GDP outlook dims on tariffs: IMEF

Mexico City, 21 May (Argus) — Mexico's association of finance executives IMEF lowered its 2025 growth forecast for a fourth consecutive month, citing the growing impact of US tariffs on the economy. GDP is now expected to grow just 0.1pc in 2025, according to IMEF's May survey, down from 0.2pc estimates in April, 0.6pc in March and 1pc in February. The number of respondents forecasting a contraction in GDP rose to 16, or 37pc of the sample, from nine in April. While the US has granted some exemptions and discounts for Mexican goods meeting regional content rules, IMEF said the effective tariff rate on Mexican exports remains higher than that for Canada, Brazil, India, Vietnam and others. "We're already seeing the [tariffs'] impacts," said IMEF economic studies director Victor Herrera, adding that May trade data will likely show a sharp drop in Mexican exports to the US. Trade is also being hit by a screwworm outbreak in cattle that led to port closures last week and curtailed beef exports, which account for $1.3bn in annual exports. More automakers could relocate or scale back production in Mexico, Herrera said, after Stellantis confirmed plans to shift some operations to the US and recent reports Nissan may close one or both of its Mexican plants. In response, Mexico this week sent deputy economy minister Luis Rosendo Gutierrez to Tokyo to meet with Mazda, Nissan, Toyota and Honda executives. IMEF cut its 2025 job creation forecast to 200,000 in May from 220,000 in April. Mexico's social security administration IMSS reported only 43,500 new jobs over the past 12 months as of 5 May. Beyond trade, IMEF flagged uncertainty from recent constitutional reforms and the potential for a US tax on remittances as additional risks to growth. The group held its 2025 inflation forecast steady at 3.8pc, despite Mexico's consumer price index rising to 3.93pc in April from 3.80pc in March . IMEF noted concerns about a potential rebound in inflation later this year after the central bank cut its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points to 9pc on 8 May — the third such cut in 2025. The group now sees the end-2025 rate at 7.75pc, down from 8pc previously. IMEF expects the peso to end the year at Ps20.80/$1, slightly lower than the Ps20.90/$1 forecast in April. The peso recently strengthened to Ps19.34/$1, though Herrera said this reflected dollar weakness more than peso strength. By James Young Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EPA to set biofuel mandate 'very soon': Zeldin


25/05/21
25/05/21

EPA to set biofuel mandate 'very soon': Zeldin

New York, 21 May (Argus) — Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) administrator Lee Zeldin stressed Wednesday that the US is working quickly to propose and finalize new biofuel blend mandates. EPA last week sent proposed Renewable Fuel Standard volumes for 2026 — and likely at least one future year — to the White House Office of Management and Budget for review, the final step before a draft rule can be released. Zeldin referenced that process at a Senate hearing Wednesday and said "we expect the proposed rule to be finalized and released very soon." Asked by US senator Pete Ricketts (R-Nebraska) whether the agency was planning on releasing something by summer or fall, Zeldin said he was eyeing a "much, much faster" timeline. "We'll finalize this as quickly as we possibly can," he said. Zeldin has stressed at recent House and Senate hearings that the agency is expediting the months-delayed rulemaking. Under the Renewable Fuel Standard, EPA requires oil refiners and importers to blend annual amounts of different types of biofuels into the conventional fuel supply. EPA decisions on volume mandates — and on requests for exemptions from small refiners — are highly influential for crop feedstock demand, biofuel production margins and retail fuel prices. Zeldin said last week at a House subcommittee hearing that EPA was also weighing what to do with a backlog of requests from small refiners for exemptions from program requirements. "None of these were getting approved at all in the last administration," Zeldin said. "We want to get caught up as quickly as we can." EPA has not commented more recently on its specific timeline and plans, but the agency said earlier this year that it wanted to get the frequently delayed biofuel program back on its statutory timeline. The Clean Air Act requires new volumes to be finalized 14 months in advance of a compliance year, which in this case would require proposed volumes for 2027 to be released soon for public comment and then finalized before November this year. A coalition of industry groups, including the American Petroleum Institute and Clean Fuels Alliance America, have pushed the agency to hike the biomass-based diesel mandate from 3.35bn USG this year to a record-high 5.25bn USG next year. Other groups, including fuel marketers, have urged more caution given a sharp drop in biofuel production to start 2025 and uncertainty about the future of a federal clean fuel tax credit being renegotiated in Congress. As part of the White House process, outside groups can seek meetings with the Trump administration to present their views on a pending regulation. Meetings are scheduled through 4 June on the proposed volumes — and through 9 June on a related rule to cut last year's cellulosic biofuel quota — though the US has expedited the process before. Last year, President Joe Biden's administration cancelled previously scheduled meetings on the initial proposal to cut cellulosic targets as a way to more speedily exit the review process. By Cole Martin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Phillips 66 shareholders split board vote


25/05/21
25/05/21

Phillips 66 shareholders split board vote

Houston, 21 May (Argus) — Activist hedge fund Elliott Investment Management is set to win two seats on Phillips 66's board of directors, short of its goal of four seats, according to preliminary results. Two Phillips 66 nominees were also elected in the vote, a positive result for the US refiner and midstream operator. Elliott, which has amassed a $2.5bn stake in Phillips 66, had put forth four nominees for the board in a proxy fight which culminated today at an annual meeting of shareholders. Both sides declared victory after the split vote on the four open seats. Phillips 66 said the vote reflects a belief in its integrated strategy of holding assets in different sectors, while Elliott said the vote "sends a clear message" that shareholders demand meaningful change at Phillips 66. The two Elliott nominees elected to the 14-member Phillips 66 board are Sigmund Cornelius, former chief financial officer of ConocoPhillips and Michael Heim, former chief operating officer of Targa Resources, according to preliminary voting results. The two Phillips 66 nominees elected to the board are Nigel Hearne, a 35-year veteran of Chevron, and Robert Pease, a former Motiva and Cenovus downstream executive who was appointed to the board in 2024 to address Elliott's concerns about a shift in focus from refining to midstream. Phillips 66 also said today that shareholders "overwhelmingly" rejected an Elliott proposal requiring annual director resignations, according to the preliminary results. The voting tally will be tabulated and certified by an independent inspector and final results will be reported to the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The two Elliott nominees for the Phillips 66 board who were not elected are Brian Coffman, former chief executive at Motiva, and Stacy Nieuwoudt, former energy analyst at Citadel. The two Phillips 66 nominees to the board that were not elected are current director John Lowe, who was up for re-election, and Howard Ungerleider, a former Dow president and chief financial officer. Long-running battle over direction Elliott contends that Phillips 66 has consistently trailed its industry peers and needs to streamline operations, including spinning off or selling its midstream business, selling its 50pc stake in Chevron Phillips Chemical (CPChem), and possibly other assets. Elliott has waged an aggressive campaign, launching a website dubbed "Streamline 66" with power point presentations, podcasts, biographies of its dissident board nominees, press releases and information on how shareholders can vote. Phillips 66 has told shareholders that its board and management team are implementing a transformative strategy that has delivered results. The company has expanded its NGL business, improved its refining cost structure and continues to position CPChem as the lowest cost producer of ethylene, Phillips 66 said. Phillips 66 told shareholders that Elliott was pushing "an aggressive short-term agenda" that would cause disruption, slow momentum and jeopardize shareholders' investment capital. Phillips 66 has made some adjustments since Elliot started to agitate for change. In addition to adding Pease to the board, the company recently agreed to sell off some of its European retail business , and expects about $1.6bn in pre-tax cash proceeds from the sale that it will use toward debt reduction and shareholder returns. But the refiner has resisted the other major Elliott recommendations to divest its midstream business and sell its 50pc share of CPChem, saying earlier this month that the Phillips board has evaluated them and "came to the conclusion that neither action is in the best interest of long-term shareholders at this time". Meanwhile, Chevron has advised Phillips 66 of its interest in acquiring the other half of CPChem "at a reasonable value for both parties", Chevron chief executive Mike Wirth said on 2 May. Three top shareholder advisory firms [backed the Elliott nominees] (https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2687988) in the proxy fight. Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) and Egan-Jones recommending all four of Elliot's dissident nominees, while Glass Lewis backed three of the four. By Eunice Bridges Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

India's air passenger traffic rises on year in April


25/05/21
25/05/21

India's air passenger traffic rises on year in April

Mumbai, 21 May (Argus) — India's domestic air passenger traffic rose by 8pc on the year but fell by 1pc on the month to 14.3mn in April, data from the Civil Aviation Ministry show. Domestic air passenger traffic rose by nearly 10pc on the year to 57.5mn during January-April. Domestic air travel serves as an indicator of jet fuel demand. Jet fuel demand in April rose by 4pc on the year to 202,000 b/d, oil ministry data show. Indian state-controlled refiners cut jet fuel prices by 6pc from a month earlier in April. Prices in capital New Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai and Chennai dropped to 89,441.18 rupees/kilolitre ($1,044/kl), Rs91,921.00/kl, Rs83,575.42/kl and Rs92,503.80/kl respectively. Fuel costs typically account for 30-40pc of airlines' expenses. Military confrontations between India and Pakistan in May disrupted flights from and within India. Almost 32 airports in parts of northern and western India were briefly closed because of security concerns and border threats. By Roshni Devi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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