Category Archives: AZ China

US$5 billion a day

The EIA recently published a report that shows that the US is now producing crude oil at a rate not seen since 1986. And it’s just as well.

In the grisly shadows of the beheadings in the Middle East, tensions between Ukraine and Russia, problems in Syria and Libya, crude oil prices have fallen, not risen. As reported in this week’s AZ China weekly report, crude oil prices are now down below $100.

The fact that prices have fallen not risen as a result of the turmoils around oil producing nations is due wholly and solely to the rise in shale oil production in the USA. Where the US was a major buyer, they are now a much smaller player in the international market.

But now according to some experts, we can put a value on the savings arising from this shock absorbing production increase. According to the former CEO of BP, crude oil prices would be at $150 today. Others have come out with similar estimates.

Based on the total amount of crude oil the world consumes, which is around 92 million BPD, that saving of more than $50 per barrel accumulates to a total saving of US$5.3 billion per day, using the WTI price of $92.

By any standard that’s an enormous saving. It also has huge repercussions for the strategic options being rolled out for governments in the USA, UK, Australia and elsewhere, not just in terms of singular issues at the present time, but for a considerable number of years ahead.

It also suggests that come the time that these ripples in oil producing nations are ironed out, the price of crude oil could well fall much further. If the price can drop in times of trouble, what will it do when the sailing is smooth?

 

US Shale oil bites Nigeria

It is well known that the USA has drastically reduced its imports of crude oil as domestic production returns to levels not seen in 30 years. But the producers of the crude that the USA no longer buys are starting to feel the pinch.

Nigeria has been one of the losers. The USA was top of the list in of customers in 2012 when it took $3.76 billion worth of Nigerian crude in Q1 alone. In Q1 2014, the USA was in 10th position with only $909.8 million of crude imports.

The Nigerians are not only lamenting the loss of sales. The abundance of crude in a major market like the USA has put pressure on the price of crude oil, with Brent hovering around $100.

Nigeria produces about 2.2 million barrels of crude oil per day. it was selling up to half that to the USA, but sales are now down to about 400,000bpd.

The problem is, crude oil sales are by far the major source of Nigerian GDP. The same scenario will be true for several other nations that are heavily oil-dependent for their GDP - reduced demand from the USA cannot be easily replaced.

In Nigeria’s case, they are selling more to India. From almost nothing in 2012, Nigeria sold $3.2 billion in the first quarter of 2014.

Is it a bubble or a paradigm shift? Does it matter?

That’s a question that can’t be answered fully for a couple of years yet. But the peak oil theory enthusiasts are already claiming that shale oil is nothing more than a blip on the radar screen. Meanwhile, others are taking this view to task.

John Kemp, one of Reuters’ most senior commentators, takes pro-peak oil man Professor James Hamilton on in a recent article. Professor Hamilton had argued that $100 oil is here to stay, but John Kemp found holes in his thesis.

“If oil wells were not extremely profitable, North Dakota and Texas would not be experiencing a drilling boom, with demand for both rigs and petroleum engineers at the highest level for three decades, said John Kemp in a recent opinion piece.

It’s hard to know who is right, but one thing that John Kemp said is surely up for further examination. Mr Kemp has criticised Professor Hamilton’s assertion that most new oil discovered is of lower quality. Mr Kemp says this isn’t so.

To me, this seems part right and part wrong, and its the part that’s wrong that is important for the aluminium industry. it’s true that some crudes coming from Eagle Ford and other areas is light and sweet, and this is presenting something of a dilemma to Gulf Coast oil refineries that have geared themselves up for heavy sour oil.

But the biggest field is the Alberta tar sands area, which is producing a heavy sour crude. This crude delivers a discounted blend to the refinery and a better economic equation, and as more pipeline and rail capacity delivers more of this crude to refineries, that’s a bigger problem for aluminium producers. Canadian heavy sour crude produces a coke that is unsuitable for anode manufacture.

We will let the experts argue over who is right and who is wrong. Right now we need to see more anode coke available in the longer term, but that desire is under threat from the vast quantities of heavy sour crude oil from Canada.

Welcome to the Crude Revolution

Welcome to AZ China’s newest service - the Crude Revolution blog.

This blog will be paying close attention to the tight oil and shale oil phenomenon in the USA, and its impact on the aluminium industry. Shale oil is already affecting the production of petroleum coke in the Gulf coast - both the volume and the quality is shifting, and is set to shift further in the months and years to come.

This blog will provide you with the latest news and opinions in the carbon and anode world.

Our sister blog, the Black China Blog, will continue to report on China’s and the world’s aluminium industry and market, and will also cover areas such as the political environment in China. We will keep stories “cross-fertilised” for the time being.

As always with AZ China’s products and services, we welcome your feedback and comments.