Times of Oman

Growing global trade boosts fuel demand

Freight volumes are growing at some of the fastest rates since 2011, according to the freight transporta­tion services index compiled by the US Bureau of Transporta­tion Statistics.

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LONDON: Freight movements in the United States and around the rest of the world are growing at some of the fastest rates this decade, which should provide a big boost for diesel consumptio­n in 2018.

In the United States, the volume of freight moved by road, rail, pipeline, barge and air between September and November was around 6 per cent higher than in the same period a year earlier.

Freight volumes are growing at some of the fastest rates since 2011, according to the freight transporta­tion services index compiled by the US Bureau of Transporta­tion Statistics.

Freight movements are being driven by an increase in coal deliveries to power plants, as well as increases in oil and gas drilling.

US businesses have also finally managed to get their inventorie­s of raw materials, unfinished work-in-progress and finished items under control.

The ratio of inventorie­s to sales has fallen to 1.33, down from a peak of 1.46 in April 2016, and the lowest for three years, according to the US Census Bureau.

The continued draw down in inventorie­s is unsustaina­ble and has left manufactur­ers, distributo­rs and retailers boosting new orders to stop the erosion of their stock levels.

Shortage of trucks

One result is a nationwide shortage of trucks and a scramble by shippers to secure enough freight capacity (“A shortage of trucks is forcing companies to cut shipments or pay up”, Wall Street Journal, Jan. 25).

Freight rates and shipment backlogs have been rising sharply as spare capacity inherited from the slowdown in cargo move- ments in 2015 and 2016 is used up.

The pattern is being repeated worldwide, with global trade growing at the fastest rate since 2011, according to the Netherland­s Bureau of Economic Policy Analysis (“World Trade Monitor”, CPB, Jan. 2018).

Global growth

The global economy is experienci­ng the strongest synchronis­ed growth since the start of the decade with all the advanced economies in a cyclical upswing.

The rise in oil and other raw materials prices is also starting to produce an upswing in the commodity-dependent developing countries that were hit hardest when commoditie­s prices started tumbling in 2014.

The current global expansion is expected to continue throughout 2018 and into 2019 which should support further rapid growth in freight volumes.

Since almost all freight is moved by trucks, railroads, barges, ships and aircraft that use diesel or jet fuel made from middle distillate­s, the economic expansion should provide a big boost for distillate demand in 2018.

Distillate consumptio­n tends to be correlated with freight and industrial production so it was hit badly by the slowdown in 2015 and 2016.

On the other hand, distillate­s are set to be the big beneficiar­y of the current global upturn, with diesel and jet taking over from gasoline as the fastest-growing source of fuel consumptio­n in 2017 and 2018.

 ?? — Reuters file picture ?? ROBUST GROWTH: The global economy is experienci­ng the strongest synchronis­ed growth since the start of the decade with all the advanced economies in a cyclical upswing.
— Reuters file picture ROBUST GROWTH: The global economy is experienci­ng the strongest synchronis­ed growth since the start of the decade with all the advanced economies in a cyclical upswing.

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