Business Standard

Opec’s war on oil overhang starts to bear fruit

- LIBBY GEORGE & AHMAD GHADDAR

Opec appears to be slowly winning the battle against a global overhang of crude and oil products as inventorie­s in onshore and floating storage decline. The price of oil may not reflect this just yet, as Brent crude futures are struggling to recover its losses for the year to date and break above $55 a barrel.

But there is no doubt that stocks are falling around the world, from Saldanha Bay in South Africa, to the Caribbean. A persistent glut of Nigerian oil is easing and even Iran has liquidated the amount of crude held in floating storage.

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) explicitly said a joint deal with non-Opec producers to cut some 1.8 million bpd in the first half of 2017 was aimed at slashing an excess of around 300 million barrels of crude and petroleum products in OECD stocks.

“Across the first quarter of the year, crude stocks built by much less than they did in the first quarter of last year even though refinery maintenanc­e globally was much heavier,” Energy Aspects analyst Richard Mallinson said.

Iran has sold all the oil it had stored for years at sea and Tehran is now struggling to keep exports growing as it grapples with production constraint­s. Trading giant Vitol has sold millions of barrels of Nigerian crude oil from storage in South Africa's Saldanha Bay, according to oil traders, with cargoes sailing for Taiwan, India, the US and Europe.

France's Total has offered a further 2 million barrels of Nigerian Escravos oil from its own Saldanha Bay storage tanks, while sources said trader Mercuria had also been offering oil from storage.

At the same time, Nigeria’s new loading programmes are finding buyers at a reasonable pace in stark contrast to the past two years, when any sales from storage put immense downward pressure on prices for newly loaded cargoes.

Nordic bank SEB said global oil inventorie­s in weekly data have dropped by 42 million barrels in the last four weeks. “Rising US crude oil stocks have created some confusion so far this year, but they are a function of reduced US refining activity on the one hand and US crude oil imports on the other,” SEB said.

Mallinson said OPEC ministers meeting in late May will not have a full picture of world stocks due to a lag in reporting from major agencies including the Internatio­nal Energy Agency. "It is going to take some time of all of the pieces of that inventory picture to become clearer."

Stocks of oil products are also steadily drawing down.

According to consultant­s FGE, total main product stocks levels in the United States, Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp independen­t storage and Singapore and Japan have declined by 6.5 million barrels, in the week to March 13 (latest full data available) to 631 million barrels. The weekly data hit an all-time high of just over 679 million barrels in February 2016, FGE said. If the declines continue, FGE said global product stocks could hit the top of the 10-year range, or 611 million barrels, in just three weeks.

 ??  ?? The price of oil may not reflect this just yet, as Brent crude futures are struggling to recover its losses for the year to date and break above $55/barrel
The price of oil may not reflect this just yet, as Brent crude futures are struggling to recover its losses for the year to date and break above $55/barrel

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India