Record US summer heat, hurricanes could roil fuel prices as oil refiners
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[July 08, 2024] By
Shariq Khan and Nicole Jao
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A double whammy of record heat and hurricanes
should test U.S. refiners' resilience in coming weeks, raising the risk
of extremely volatile fuel prices in the middle of the peak travel
season, analysts said.
The Atlantic hurricane season from June through November is an annual
threat for U.S. refineries. Half of the country's over
18-million-barrel-per-day refining capacity is located along the Gulf
Coast, highly susceptible to tropical storms. The U.S. is the largest
fuel market in the world.
Refiners this year may have to brace for more storms than usual.
Government forecasters expect up to seven major hurricanes in coming
months, double the annual average of three major Atlantic hurricanes
with wind speeds over 111 miles per hour.
Citgo Petroleum Corp was cutting output at its 165,000 barrel-per-day
Corpus Christi refinery on Saturday and plans to run the facility at
minimum during Tropical Storm Beryl's passage over the Texas Coast,
sources said.
The largest ports in Texas also closed operations and vessel traffic in
preparation for Beryl, which is expected to strengthen back to a
hurricane before hitting the area early on Monday.
The intensity and timing of Beryl, which at one point became the
earliest Category 5 hurricane on record, signals an active and
disruptive season ahead, said Neil Crosby, crude market analyst at
Sparta Commodities.
"Hurricanes remain the biggest wild card for gasoline prices," said
GasBuddy analyst Patrick De Haan. "No better reminder of that than
Beryl," he said.
Evacuation orders ahead of storms can lift stockpiling and boost fuel
demand, causing prices for gasoline, diesel and other refined products
to move higher, De Haan said.
If a major storm hits the Gulf Coast's refining system, it could remove
as much as a million barrels a day of fuel supply and lead to extended
outages or even permanent closures, according to the U.S. Energy
Information Administration (EIA).
Hurricanes heading for the Gulf Coast could also knock out a similar
amount of crude supply, with the offshore Gulf of Mexico region housing
around 14% of U.S. crude output.
In 2021, U.S. oil and gas companies suspended more than 1.7 million
barrels oil output in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida.
Outages of around 1.5 million bpd of crude production and refining
capacity can cause gasoline prices to jump by 25 cents to 30 cents,
according to EIA.
WARMER TEMPS
In addition to hurricanes, refineries this year must contend with more
problems related to scorching heat.
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Oil rigs are seen in the Gulf of Mexico after Hurricane Ida made
landfall in Louisiana, in Grand Isle, Louisiana, U.S. August 31,
2021. REUTERS/Marco Bello/File Photo
The latest U.S. monthly temperature outlook foresees above average
temperatures in large parts of the U.S. in July, typically the
hottest month.
Excessive temperatures have supersized effects on commodity supply
chains, including oil and fuel, JPMorgan analysts wrote last month.
Most refineries are designed to operate between 32 and 95 degrees
Fahrenheit. Triple-digit temperatures could lead to equipment
malfunctions and reduction in refining capacity.
Extreme heat last year led to a 500,000 bpd reduction in Gulf Coast
refined products output, the JPM analysts wrote.
Similar effects are being felt this year. Unit upsets reported by
Phillips 66 at its Wood River refinery in Illinois last month were
likely due to heatwaves, according to Kloza and other industry
experts.
SILVER LINING
A robust maintenance season earlier this year allowed U.S.
refineries to undertake major upgrades and perform detailed upkeep
which had been repeatedly postponed due to surging post-pandemic
demand and supply disruptions.
That should, in theory, make refineries better prepared for the
hurricane season, said Alex Hodes, oil analyst at brokerage StoneX.
Slow demand in recent months has also helped refineries build fuel
stockpiles, which should act as a buffer in case of outages.
U.S. gasoline inventories have risen by about 4 million barrels
since the beginning of April to near 231.7 million barrels by June
28, in line with the seasonal average of the past five years
excluding 2020.
Inventories of distillates including diesel and heating oil have
grown by 3.7 million barrels from the start of April and were at
119.7 million barrels by June 28, slightly below the historical
average excluding 2020, when inventories were sharply elevated by
COVID-related demand destruction.
"There's not much margin for error," said Tom Kloza, head of energy
analysis at Oil Price Information Service. "I'm waiting to see what
happens."
(Reporting by Shariq Khan and Nicole Jao in New York; Editing by Liz
Hampton, David Gregorio and Sherry Jacob-Phillips)
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