While the oil industry is moving in the right direction with a number of refinery closures announced since October, more closures are likely needed, as the global oil demand to reach pre-Covid-19 levels by 2023, said the Bank of America (BofA) in a new report
Refinery closures span the US, Northwest Europe, and the Asia Pacific
region and totalling nearly 1 million barrels per day (b/d) of capacity,
according to the latest Global Energy Weekly from BofA Securities.
Meanwhile, a handful of struggling refineries, especially in the Asia
Pacific region, have undertaken reviews to determine whether closing or
repurposing are better options than continuing refinery operations.
In addition to closing plants, the industry idled capacity and cut runs
at active refineries, hoping to restore operations as margins improve.
Platts estimates 16 million b/d of outages globally YTD, up nearly 8
million b/d year-on-year, which helped draw product stocks down from
record levels. Yet, margins across most regions recovered only modestly,
limited by a fragile demand rebound and capacity at the ready.
"Gasoline cracks rallied to two month highs this week, but winter
headwinds could push cracks lower once again,” the report said, adding
that rising Covid-19 cases across the Northern Hemisphere have triggered
lockdowns and more restrictive measures seem likely.
Mobility trends are weakening in Europe and states like California and
New York, pointing to soft gasoline demand this holiday season.
Furthermore, gasoline inventories have also risen to new five year
seasonal highs recently. These factors could set winter gasoline cracks
up for weakness in the coming weeks.
"Summer grade gasoline cracks have rallied nearly $2 per barrel
recently but remain just shy of our 2Q21 forecasts. While we remain
constructive on gasoline cracks versus the forward curve for next
summer, upside is likely limited due to the amount of underutilized
refining capacity that could respond to higher margins,” the report
said.
(TradeArabia News Service, December 23, 2020)