MBIE officials play down conflict in fuel security reports
Is the country’s supply of petrol, diesel and jet fuel becoming more vulnerable to disruption? Yes, and no, reports Phil Pennington , of RNZ.
THE Government has received contrasting advice on the vulnerability of New Zealand’s fuel supplies, days before of a crucial decision on stopping all oil refining here.
Officials insist the advice is not contradictory.
The National Party said the country cannot have confidence in the ‘‘inconsistent’’ advice and the lack of a government plan for energy security.
The country’s only refinery, at Marsden Point near Whangarei, is poised to stop processing crude into different fuels, after nearly 60 years, and turn instead to importing readymade fuel from next year.
Refining NZ has recommended shareholders back this shift when they vote on August 6.
Already, refining volumes have been cut, and the likes of roadmakers are grappling with how to ensure newly imported bitumen is up to scratch.
The Government is weighing up the risks of the country losing all ability to make its own petrol, diesel and jet fuel.
A report to the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment by consultants Hale and Twomey said this ‘‘would have a significant impact on New Zealand’s fuel security’’.
It listed eight ways it would raise risks to fuel security.
But a second report, by the same Wellington consultant, said it would not ‘‘have a major impact on fuel security’’.
This second report suggested risks could actually be reduced, as it is easier to source readymade fuel than crude oil overseas.
MBIE said it ‘‘doesn’t agree that the reports are contradictory’’.
The first report was highlevel, while the second was ‘‘a more comprehensive and nuanced discussion of the risks’’, it told RNZ.
‘‘Can’t believe’’ differences
National energy and resources spokeswoman Barbara Kuriger said: ‘‘I just can’t believe how the two reports have ended up so differently.’’
Consultants Hale and Twomey said that for the second report, they interviewed major oil importers, and for the first report they did not.
Their second report is three times as long and cost 10 times as much to produce — $60,000.
‘‘On careful reading, we remain comfortable with both reports and their recommendations in the context of what we were asked to do for each,’’ Ian Twomey said in an email.
The first report went into detail about the eight risk factors, while the second report either did not address these, or said they could be managed.
The end to the coastal oil tankers, which distribute Marsden Point’s products, is a concern in the first report, but not in the second.
So, too, for the risks of readymade imports not being up to standard; this can be dealt with, without needing a refinery, the second report said.
It does not mention the risk of an end to the local supply of sulphur for fertiliser or the loss of local skills in oil processing.
The country will remain reliant on tankers, whether these bring in crude, as now, or swap to just processed fuel imports.
However, the shift to importonly at Marsden Point would cut supplies held in stock, to about 20 days’ demand.
The second report said that is acceptable, though it is much less than the stockpiles of many other countries.
Most readymade fuel would be imported from North Asia.
The report modelled disruption to that source, say, from hurricanes or war.
It forecast it taking between three and six weeks to organise emergency supplies, but said that backup stocks would keep any fuel shortfall to a maximum of just three days.
This presumes international cooperation and the report did not model a failure in normal global trading activity.
‘‘In this case the loss of crude/ refinery intermediate stock would reduce New Zealand’s options, as would the loss of the ability to at least refine New Zealand’s domestic crude.’’
However, the experience of Covid19 showed fuel use could be curtailed dramatically in an emergency, it said.
Reducing risks
The second report suggested fuel supply risks could be reduced, because the country would be getting its fuel from more diverse sources offshore, instead of relying on Marsden Point to refine twothirds of supplies.
‘‘This would remove refinery disruption . . . as a single point failure risk.’’
Also, it was easier to adjust the types of fuel imported than to adjust refining here — an added flexibility given extra value by the pandemic, when jet fuel had not been needed so much.
‘‘MBIE is currently considering Hale and Twomey’s recommendations in the second report and plans to provide further advice to the minister in the next few months,’’ the ministry said.
Ms Kuriger said if the consultants had talked to the industry in the first place, their first report might not be so different from the second one.
‘‘If I was a minister, and I got two completely conflicting reports, I’d be asking where the truth was,’’ she said.
‘‘I suspect the truth is probably somewhere in the middle.’’
Hale and Twomey would not comment further.
Energy dependent
National could not change commercial realities which made Marsden Point uncompetitive with Asian refineries, but it could plan better to reduce energy supply risks, Ms Kuriger said.
‘‘We’re becoming quite energy dependent on the rest of the world.
‘‘The word I get most often when I talk to people in the energy sector is ‘uncertainty’.
‘‘There’s a massive gap between now and when we’re going to be totally reliable on our own renewable energy,’’ Ms Kuriger said.
The Marsden Point reports reveal a fundamental problem in the ministry’s attempts to manage fuel stock risks — it is reliant on data that is often incorrect, and has been for years, Ms Kuriger said. — RNZ