Global jet fuel demand under pressure from Omicron, border curbs
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[November 30, 2021] By
Koustav Samanta
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Global jet fuel
markets stayed under pressure on Tuesday as more countries expanded
border restrictions to keep the new Omicron coronavirus variant at bay,
prompting travellers to reconsider their plans.
Jet fuel demand - the biggest laggard in the oil complex - had been
forecast to post the strongest growth of 550,000 barrels per day to 5.9
million bpd in fourth quarter, according to the International Energy
Agency in its Nov. 16 report.
But now Omicron pose the greatest risk to jet fuel consumption. Hong
Kong expanded a ban on entry for non-residents from several countries,
the latest to expand travel curbs after Israel and Japan have already
announced border closures to all foreign travellers.
Britain and Australia have tightened rules for all arrivals in response
to the new variant while hundreds and thousands of would-be travellers
are now considering to cancel or delay their trips in response to
renewed restrictions.
"The real risk from the new variant is ... the reimposition of more
widespread flight restrictions during the winter and again reducing
current global jet fuel demand of some 6 million barrels per day
significantly," energy consultancy FGE said in a note.
Graphic: Asia jet fuel prices
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ce/akpezmdyxvr/Pasted%20image%201638249448721.png
Asian refining margins for jet fuel slumped to their lowest in more that
two months on Monday at $6.92 a barrel, while the front-month time
spread for the aviation fuel in Singapore flipped to a contango for the
first time since end-September.
"Current jet demand levels are just 1 mb/d above last winter, when cases
and hospitalizations were far higher and before any widespread
vaccinations," Goldman Sachs analysts said in a Nov. 26 note.
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A worker fills an Airbus jet with aviation fuel at Fuhlsbuettel
airport in Hamburg, March 14, 2012. REUTERS/Fabian Bimmer/File Photo
"While a worst case outcome could be a return to last winter's levels, 0.5 mb/d
downside to our current base-case until 2Q22 would be a conservative assumption
given what we know at present."
Graphic: Asia refining margins slip from 2-year highs
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gfx/ce/egpbkardzvq/Pasted%20image%201638159705598.png
Global airlines, most of which have been struggling since last year's plunge in
air travel as a majority of long-haul international flights remained grounded,
are now scrambling to limit the impact of the latest variant on their networks.
"In total, 2.4% of scheduled (global airline) capacity has been removed for the
next four months," aviation data firm OAG said.
"But it is too soon to say whether this is due to slightly weaker demand than
expected, or an early response by some airlines to the prospect of the Omicron
variant of the COVID-19 virus causing a return to border restrictions for
international air travel."
Trade sources said the new variant have dampened the near-term hopes for any
substantial demand recovery.
"Now it's like the snake and ladder boardgame. I think Vaccinated Travel Lanes (VTL)
would be important to keep the momentum in the aviation industry," a
Singapore-based jet fuel trader said.
"Definitely, there's no hope to see a speedy recovery, which was expected before
this Omicron variant."
(Reporting by Koustav Samanta; Editing by Florence Tan and Rashmi Aich)
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