Texas flood: U.S. oil exports pour into markets
worldwide
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[February 08, 2018]
By Catherine Ngai, Libby George and Florence Tan
NEW YORK/LONDON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - In
the two years since Washington lifted a 40-year ban on oil exports,
tankers filled with U.S. crude have landed in more than 30 countries,
ranging from massive economies like China and India to tiny Togo.
The repeal has unleashed a flood of U.S. shale oil, undercutting global
crude prices, eroding the clout of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) and seizing market share from many of its
member countries.
In 2005, before the shale revolution, the United States had net imports
of 12.5 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude and fuels - compared to
just 4 million bpd today.
U.S. producers are making new customers out of some of the world's
biggest oil-importing nations in Asia and Europe, posing a serious
competitive threat to the only other countries that produce as much
crude: Saudi Arabia and Russia. At home, the export boom has filled
pipelines and sparked a surge of investment in new shipping
infrastructure on the Gulf Coast.
(For an interactive graphic detailing the global impacts of the U.S.
shale revolution, see: http://tmsnrt.rs/2EtJgen)
U.S. producers now export between 1.5 million and 2 million barrels of
crude a day, which could rise to about 4 million by 2022. The nation's
output is expected to account for more than 80 percent of global supply
growth in the next decade, according to Paris-based International Energy
Agency.
Much of the increased flow will go to China, the world's top importer
and, since November, the largest buyer of U.S. crude other than Canada.
Chen Bo, president of Unipec - China's largest buyer of U.S. crude -
told Reuters that the firm expects to double U.S. imports this year to
300,000 bpd as it seeks to expand sales in Asia and find new customers
for U.S. exports in other regions, including Europe.
Unipec - the trading arm of Asia's largest refiner, state-owned Sinopec
- is also considering long-term crude supply deals with U.S. pipeline
and terminal operators. The firm may also partner with such firms to
expand and improve U.S. export infrastructure, Chen said in an
interview.
"U.S. crude flowing to Asia is a major trend in global oil trading,"
Chen told Reuters.
Separately, China's state-owned chemical and oil conglomerate Sinochem
Group plans to open a trading office in Houston later this year to
source U.S. crude for China's independent refineries, five sources
familiar with the plans told Reuters.
Between 2010 and 2017, U.S. oil production rose from 5.5 million barrels
a day to 10 million bpd - approaching a record set in 1970 - as shale
fields in west Texas and North Dakota lured massive new drilling
investments. That brings national production in line with Saudi Arabia
and close to top-producer Russia's 10.9 million barrels a day.
Saudi Arabia cut output last year as part of OPEC's 2016 deal to reduce
supply - after losing a price war with U.S. shale producers that created
a global glut.
Most forecasts show U.S. crude output growing about 500,000 to 600,000
barrels per day through the end of 2018, said David Fyfe, chief
economist at global commodity trading firm Gunvor Group in Geneva,
Switzerland. The U.S. Energy Department is even more optimistic, now
expecting growth to rise by 1.2 million bpd - hitting 11 million bpd by
year-end.
"The bulk of that growth will likely be exported," Fyfe said.
U.S. producers are also displacing foreign oil at home.
Total U.S. crude imports have dropped to 7.6 million barrels a day from
a peak of 10.6 million bpd in 2006. OPEC's share has declined from more
than half of U.S. imports to about 37 percent as the United States
relies more on domestic production and neighboring Canada.
OPEC members Saudi Arabia, Nigeria and Angola have been among the
hardest hit. In the second half of 2017, U.S. imports from Saudi Arabia
averaged 709,000 bpd, lowest since 1987 and down from a peak of 1.73
million bpd in 2003.
[to top of second column] |
An oil tanker stands attached to a mooring station near a refinery
in Bayonne, New Jersey, U.S., August 24, 2011. REUTERS/Lucas
Jackson/File Photo
BIG BUYERS IN INDIA, EUROPE
U.S. producers have also broken into the market in India - the world's
third-largest oil importer and home to the world's largest refining complex,
operated by Reliance Industries.
Seeking to diversify its foreign supplies, India first imported U.S. crude in
October and bought a total of 8 million barrels of U.S. oil last year, according
to Thomson Reuters ship-tracking data and shipping data provided by sources.
In Europe, as of November, the United States had become the fifth-largest oil
supplier to France, according to customs data, exceeding Nigeria, Libya, Iran or
the North Sea. In November 2016, the U.S. didn't even make the top ten.
China stopped importing Nigerian crude in the fourth quarter, according to
Chinese customs figures, and while China's overall imports rose by 12 percent in
2017, imports from Saudi Arabia rose just 2.3 percent.
"They're taking market share really from OPEC nations,” said Olivier Jakob,
managing director of PetroMatrix.
GULF COAST SHIPPING BOOM
Surging U.S. exports are rippling through the rest of the domestic energy
economy. Shipping terminals Texas and around the Gulf Coast are building out
infrastructure to handle larger tankers.
“If we didn’t have the option to send that crude to export markets, I think
crude oil production would have been much more distressed," said Jarl Pedersen,
chief commercial officer at Port Corpus Christi in south Texas, referring to
2016, when oil prices were still in the 40s.
Pipeline and logistics firms are among the big beneficiaries, as booming crude
demand means steadier profits for companies sending oil to the Gulf and storing
it for export.
Enterprise Products Partners <EPD.N> - which operates more than 5,000 miles of
crude oil pipelines and 38 million barrels of crude storage - reported record
profits in 2017, boosted by record volumes for its pipelines and marine
terminals.
Magellan Midstream Partners <MMP.N>, which operates key pipelines from Texas's
Permian Basin to the Gulf, expects to spend more than $1.7 billion in the next
two years on construction projects. Among those are new docks, storage and
marine terminals in the Houston area to meet growing demand.
Terminal operators and shippers in the U.S. Gulf are ramping up investment to
guard against supply bottlenecks as more barrels leave the U.S. It can take 18
to 24 months to build an export dock.
Gulf Coast terminals handle three-quarters of U.S. crude exports, but only one -
the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP) terminal - can handle supertankers that
can carry up to 2 million barrels of oil.
Most shipping channels are too shallow. Last year, Occidental Petroleum Corp's <OXY.N>
Ingleside terminal at Corpus Christi test-loaded a supertanker - but that
channel is currently not deep enough to fully load such a vessel.
In late January, the CEO of the Corpus Christi port forwarded a letter from six
energy executives pressing the Trump Administration for $60 million in federal
funding for ship channel improvements as part of a $320 million project to widen
and deepen the port's ship channel.
Lifting the crude export ban allowed for $50 billion in industrial projects in
south Texas alone, the executives wrote.
"If that project for some reason should stall," said Corpus Christi's Pedersen,
"that would really make U.S. crude less competitive in Asia."
(Additional reporting by Jessica Resnick Ault in New York, Bryan Sims in Houston
and Nidhi Verma in New Delhi; Editing by David Gaffen, Simon Webb and Brian
Thevenot)
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