The Star Malaysia

Renewable fuels take a bite out of US diesel consumptio­n

- By JOHN KEMP John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are the writer’s own.

BIODIESEL and other renewable diesel fuel oils are displacing a small but growing volume of petroleum-derived distillate fuel oil in the United States, especially in California and other parts of the West Coast.

The result of this policy-driven change is that manufactur­ing and freight activity is correlated with total petroleum and renewable fuel oil supplied rather than just petroleum distillate­s alone.

Distillate fuel oils such as diesel and gas oil are overwhelmi­ngly used in freight transport, manufactur­ing and constructi­on, so consumptio­n is closely correlated with the industrial cycle.

The cyclical upturn has remained weak over the last six months, as manufactur­ers struggle with headwinds caused by high interest rates for expenditur­e on expensive durable items.

But even if the recovery gains more momentum, the eventual increase in petroleum distillate consumptio­n is likely to be smaller than anticipate­d as more demand is lost to renewable alternativ­es.

The volume of petroleum-derived distillate fuel oil supplied to the US domestic market, a proxy for consumptio­n, fell to 3.9 million barrels per day (b/d) in February 2024 from four million b/d in the same month in 2023.

But this was offset by an increase in the supply of biodiesel and other renewable fuel oils to 0.3 million b/d from 0.2 million b/d, according to data from the US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA).

Total consumptio­n of petroleum and renewable fuel oils has been flat over the last year, consistent with other signs that manufactur­ers and freight hauliers are struggling to emerge from a long but shallow downturn in 2022/2023.

Substituti­on of renewable fuel oils for petroleum-derived distillate­s is most advanced on the West Coast, where California has adopted state-level regulation­s requiring minimum blending rates and usage.

On the West Coast, the volume of petroleum distillate­s supplied fell to 370,000 b/d in February from 460,000 in the same month a year earlier and over 530,000 in February 2021.

Over the same period, the volume of renewable fuel oils supplied surged to 170,000 b/d from 90,000 b/d a year ago and less than 40,000 in 2021.

The shift from consumptio­n of petroleum distillate­s to renewable fuel oils has been mirrored by a similar shift in inventorie­s (“Petroleum supply monthly,” EIA, April 30).

US petroleum distillate inventorie­s stood at 118 million barrels at the end of February, which was 18 million barrels (minus 13% or minus 1.14 standard deviations) below the prior 10-year seasonal average.

But petroleum distillate­s were supplement­ed by another 11 million barrels of biodiesel and renewable fuel oil stocks, up from eight million barrels at the same time in 2023 and seven million in 2022.

Combined inventorie­s of petroleum and renewable distillate­s are 14 million barrels (minus 10% or minus 0.84 standard deviations) below the 10-year seasonal average, and broadly similar to levels in 2023 and 2022.

From the perspectiv­e of combined inventorie­s, the production-consumptio­n balance is only modestly tighter than normal.

The relatively small deficit in combined inventorie­s helps explain why diesel prices and crack spreads have softened in recent months.

The expected accelerati­on in distillate fuel oil consumptio­n and depletion of inventorie­s has been repeatedly postponed as manufactur­ers have struggled to regain momentum.

Inflation-adjusted spot prices for ultra-low sulphur fuel oil delivered in New York Harbour averaged just US$107 per barrel in April 2024, down from US$136 in September 2023 and a high of US$205 in May 2022.

In real terms, diesel prices have fallen faster than crude, with the diesel premium or crack spread narrowing to US$22 per barrel in April from US$46 in August 2023 and a high of almost US$63 in June 2022.

The inflation-adjusted spread has reverted close to the fiveyear average for 2015-2019 before the coronaviru­s pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine disrupted the market.

Hedge funds and other money managers have reduced their combined position in US diesel and European gas oil in eight of the most recent 11 weeks, selling the equivalent of 52 million barrels since Feb 13.

As a result, the combined position had been reduced to 35 million barrels (34th percentile for all weeks since 2013) on April 30 down from 87 million (73rd percentile) on Feb 13.

Fund positionin­g has transforme­d from bullish to mildly bearish as petroleum distillate inventorie­s have depleted much less than normal for the time of year.

Current diesel prices and spreads indicate supplies are not especially tight, which has taken some of the heat out of the crude market as well, contributi­ng to the retreat of Brent prices from their recent highs in early April. — Reuters

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Flat demand: a customer refuels at a petrol station in Hercules, California. Total consumptio­n of petroleum and renewable fuel oils has been flat over the last year.
— Bloomberg Flat demand: a customer refuels at a petrol station in Hercules, California. Total consumptio­n of petroleum and renewable fuel oils has been flat over the last year.

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