Arab Times

Traders mop up fuel cargoes before worldwide refinery repair crunch

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LONDON, Nov 23, (RTRS): Traders are chasing gasoline and diesel cargoes and drawing volumes away from Europe to prepare for a particular­ly heavy round of refinery works around the world.

The buying spree has soaked up fuel even as many refineries have been running flat out, while the surge in demand has sent tankers on unusually erratic routes.

This has underpinne­d a bullish oil market that has pushed crude prices to two-year highs.

Buyers from Venezuela to Singapore, still recovering from the loss of millions of barrels in US refining in the autumn due to Hurricane Harvey, are now grappling with upcoming refinery closures for repairs in the Middle East.

With Latin America’s own refineries running at a fraction of capacity due to lack of maintenanc­e, the region has been taking much of the diesel coming from the US Gulf Coast.

To compensate, US East Coast buyers have pulled in diesel cargoes that had been destined for Europe, including one siphoned from a 2-millionbar­rel vessel that was built to carry crude from Asia.

“Demand has come in stronger than people anticipate­d,” said Robert Campbell, head of oil products research with Energy Aspects, adding that the increase in demand for products stocks in advance of earlyyear maintenanc­e came faster than expected.

In the past, diesel cargoes rarely left Europe, a region that imports nearly 20 percent of its needs and which traders till recently termed a “dumping ground” for the fuel. But exports have surged from Europe since Hurricane Harvey.

Gasoil stocks in independen­t storage in Europe’s Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp hub plummeted to three-year lows last week, falling below 2 million tonnes even as winter demand for heating fuel looms. At that level, stocks are 42 percent lower than the 2017 high hit in May and about half the record hit last year.

Gasoline is also heading out of Europe. Data from industry monitor Genscape shows 3.6 million barrels of gasoline and reformate, a component used to make the motor fuel, left Europe for China, Singapore and the Middle East in the past two months.

By some estimates shipments are at least 20 percent above the same period last year. Several traders said roughly 1 million barrels per day loaded in the past week alone, bound for the Middle East and Far East.

“That’s a ridiculous volume of exports,” one trader said.

Iranian gasoline production shortages forced Iran to import more cargoes. But buying is mainly being driven by refinery maintenanc­e work planned for first quarter of 2018, particular­ly in Saudi Arabia, said Campbell and several traders.

“We’re talking about a very large amount of crude capacity that’s coming off,” Campbell said, adding it would lead the Middle East region to continue importing into early next year.

Demand for gasoline cargoes is keeping stocks from building significan­tly, even though refineries worldwide are running at more than 96 percent of capacity, their highest in more than three years, according to estimates by analysts JBC.

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