Fuel markets to stay tight till mid-2020s as refining shrinks
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[September 13, 2022] By
Ahmad Ghaddar
LONDON (Reuters) - Crude oil refining
capacity has shrunk by a record 3.8 million barrels per day from March
2020 to mid-2022 as demand expanded, setting the stage for fuel markets
to remain very tight until at least mid-decade, International Energy
Forum and S&P Global research showed.
The fall in capacity comes as oil demand rose by 5.6 million bpd over
the same period, the report released on Tuesday said.
At the same time, about 2 million bpd of net capacity is expected to
come online by the end of 2023, with delays to these timeline likely to
arise, the report said.
"This puts pressure on all available refining capacity to run at high
utilisation levels to keep up with demand."
Oil product markets experienced sharp upheaval since the COVID-19
pandemic was declared in March 2020.
While the pandemic decimated demand globally and killed profit margins,
the post-pandemic recovery and Western sanctions on Russia over its
invasion of Ukraine have tightened fuel markets sharply, leading to
record profit margins earlier this year.
Record profits for refiners are unlikely to lead to new investment in
expanding global refining capacity, however, according to the report,
amid "the expectation that the energy transition could make refineries
stranded assets has deterred investment".
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A view shows petrol prices displayed on
an indicator board at a filling station after the end of the fuel
discount in Cologne, Germany, September 1, 2022. REUTERS/Thilo
Schmuelgen/File Photo
A sharp rise plug-in electric vehicle sales, which are expected to grow from 6.6
million last year to 35.7 million at the end of the decade, will likely displace
4 million bpd of gasoline and diesel demand.
The falling refining capacity comes at a time when global fuel inventories are
tight and as Russian and Chinese exports of fuels are being constrained, the
report said.
Sanctions and embargoes have displaced nearly 3 million bpd of Russian products
that are not easily rerouted.
And Chinese product exports are down 30% from 2019 levels as the government has
strategically shifted to prioritising domestic markets.
(Reporting by Ahmad Ghaddar; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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