Houston Chronicle

White pastor speaks out

Chinese consumptio­n, petroleum products help drive recovery

- By Grant Smith, Alex Longley and Andy Hoffman

Black lives matter

Regarding “For St. John’s UMC’s pastor, ‘This is a moment for the church to speak’,” (A3, Feb. 7): I want to commend Erica Grieder for her column on Sunday which highlighte­d the need for the church to speak out and not remain silent and complicit on racism and white supremacy. I affirm Pastor Rudy Rasmus’ call for white pastors to speak out, take action and stand with our brothers and sisters of color in combating systemic and institutio­nal racism.

I am a white, 72-year-old United Methodist pastor, and I must confess my silence and lack of action in opposing white supremacy. I believe Black Lives Matter, and this is the year to speak out and take action.

White supremacy is in opposition to the teachings of Jesus, the character of Jesus, the commands of Jesus to love God and love our neighbor. It is also in opposition to the teachings of Paul in how we are to live as followers of Christ with love, kindness, compassion, gentleness and patience. To love our neighbor is to affirm all people are created by God and all people are children of God. We are all in this together!

I want to also affirm with Mayor Sylvester Turner about the inequities of the vaccine distributi­on. Yes, action is needed to make sure minority communitie­s get their share of the vaccine as soon as possible. This is another example of the lack of fairness for people of color.

Hopefully, this will be a great year for the church to fight injustice and actually love all our neighbors.

Rev. James McPhail, Memorial Drive

United Methodist Church, Houston

One year after the first glimmers of the catastroph­e awaiting global oil markets — from deserted Chinese cities to grounded jets — crude is staging a remarkable turnaround.

The crisis triggered by the deadly coronaviru­s was the worst the petroleum industry has ever seen. Fuel demand crashed by a fifth, prices slumped below zero, producers fought viciously over customers, and more than a billion surplus barrels poured into storage tanks around the world.

Yet oil’s emergence from the calamity has been stark.

Futures rallied to a one-year high above $60 a barrel in London on Monday as Chinese consumptio­n surpasses previrus levels, the vaccine rollout restores confidence and the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies keep a tight leash on supply.

With western economies still pounded by a high death toll and lockdowns, demand for transport fuels — particular­ly in aviation — remains depressed. But it’s roaring for the petroleum products that cater to a society working and consuming at home — ones that power ships, make plastics and fire up space heaters.

“The recovery is proceeding at a faster rate than people perceived,” said Ed Morse, head of commoditie­s research at Citigroup. “The demand recovery is going to look stellar. The inventory draw is significan­tly

greater than what many people thought.”

The sudden reversal is a salve for an array of producers. It’s offering supermajor­s such as Exxon Mobil and BP a glimmer of hope after a grueling year. For countries such as Iraq and Angola, which have sought aid from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to quell economic crises, it’s a lifeline. Even wealthier exporters such as Saudi Arabia consider the extra revenue crucial.

Plunging stockpiles

The strongest sign of the recovery is one of the most esoteric — a price structure known as backwardat­ion. Near-term futures contracts have built up a sizable premium relative to later months, indicating immediate supplies are tightening fast.

One gauge watched closely by crude traders — the difference between contracts based on North Sea Brent crude settling in December versus those a year later — has surged to a two-year high of $2.84 a barrel.

That’s a signal for refiners to dig into the huge stockpiles that built up during the worst of last year’s demand slump. These inventorie­s are plunging everywhere, from major depots in the United States, China and the United Arab Emirates to the tanker fleet once commandeer­ed to house spare barrels at sea.

Global inventorie­s have declined by about 300 million barrels since OPEC and its partners made deep production cuts in May, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency estimates.

The cartel projects that it will deplete another 82 million barrels this quarter, pushing stockpiles in industrial­ized nations down to their five-year average by August. Bloated inventorie­s weigh on oil prices, so eliminatin­g the overhang could pave the way for a further recovery.

“We are drawing stocks,” said Ben Luckock, co-head of oil trading at Trafigura Group in Geneva. Prices have recovered well and “can seriously perform come summer both in crude and in products.”

Asian recovery

One of the forces driving this rapid turnaround is the rebound in oil consumptio­n, particular­ly in Asia.

“Not only did China have a Vshaped recovery, but they’re actually back into significan­t growth mode,” Royal Dutch Shell CEO Ben van Beurden said in a Bloomberg television interview last week. “We are quite optimistic about what it is that we are seeing in China.”

The world’s biggest crude importer’s success at containing the coronaviru­s has allowed a rapid resumption of economic activity. Government data showed a record stockpile decline in December as processing volumes increased.

In India, fuel consumptio­n has inched back toward normal levels as the spread of the coronaviru­s prompted the use of more cooking fuel and gasoline. Overall, the nation’s oil-product demand in December was 1.4 percent lower than levels a year ago, provisiona­l data from its oil ministry showed.

Big boxes

Asia’s resilience is only part of oil’s comeback. It’s being amplified by less obvious sources of strength that can be summed up as freight, chemicals and cold.

Consumers are diverting spending from holidays and restaurant meals toward deliveries of physical goods. That entails shipping loads of stuff across the planet, which is spurring demand for diesel to power ships, trucks, planes and freight trains.

UPS, the courier whose biggest customer is Amazon, said it observed a seasonal peak almost without parallel. Profits from making diesel in the United States are at a nine-month high of about $15 a barrel.

“Diesel has been the standout,” said Citigroup’s Morse. “In a lot of parts of the world, trucking demand went up — and that’s part and parcel of the pandemic, where people stop shopping at retail stores and start shopping at home.”

The e-commerce boom is lifting other hydrocarbo­ns as well. The packaging needed for all those deliveries is boosting demand for naphtha, used in plastics. Typically trading at a discount to Brent crude, the oil product is at a rare premium of 30 cents a barrel — the strongest in seasonal terms in at least five years, according to DV Trading.

Chemicals giants such as Dow Inc. and BASF SE have reported bumper earnings amid the plastic bonanza, while refiners such as Austria’s OMV AG also observed robust demand.

Big freeze

Then there’s exceptiona­lly cold weather this winter, which inflicted freezing temperatur­es on Asia and one of the worst snowstorms to ever hit New York City.

The chill boosted global oil demand by 1 million barrels a day, as soaring prices of natural gas prompted the switch to diesel generators for power, according to Goldman Sachs. It also stirred purchases of propane, used in the heaters that became ubiquitous outside bars and restaurant­s in parts of the United States where indoor dining was discourage­d.

In many ways the market is healing, but it’s not fully recovered.

Global oil consumptio­n is still down about 5 percent to 7 percent from a year ago, Shell’s van Beurden said. Most of that is due to the ongoing loss in jet fuel demand, with air passenger traffic 70 percent below year-ago levels as of December, according to the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n.

Even Chinese consumptio­n faces headwinds, as resurgent infections force new lockdowns and the government discourage­s the travel usually seen during the Lunar New Year. Glitches with the worldwide rollout of vaccines, and the risk of more dangerous virus mutations, are compoundin­g fears of another market relapse.

There are a “plethora of demand uncertaint­ies,” said Amrita Sen, chief oil analyst at consultant­s Energy Aspects.

OPEC+ accelerato­r

Yet those concerns have largely been offset by the other big factor in the market’s rehabilita­tion: massive reductions in supply undertaken by the 23-nation alliance of producers known as OPEC+.

The cartel’s initial response to the coronaviru­s made the oil-market crisis worse. In March last year, Saudi Arabia and Russia had a bitter disagreeme­nt and for several weeks waged a brutal price war. But when the toll on demand became clear, they reunited and slashed production by an unpreceden­ted 10 million barrels a day, or about 10 percent of global supplies.

OPEC+ returned a portion of that oil to the market in August, but right now it’s clearly focused on speeding up the eliminatio­n of the stockpile surplus. The group will continue to idle about 7 million barrels a day for another two months, before considerin­g whether to gradually ease the cuts. Meanwhile, the Saudis are making an extra reduction of 1 million barrels a day in February and March to spur the recovery.

“We see the market still balancing between COVID-driven demand destructio­n and OPEC’s ability to manage supply cuts,” said Torbjorn Tornqvist, chairman and CEO of Gunvor Group in Geneva.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? One of the forces driving the rapid turnaround is the rebound in oil consumptio­n, with use by China above previrus levels, offering supermajor­s such as Exxon Mobil and BP a glimmer of hope after a grueling year.
Associated Press file photo One of the forces driving the rapid turnaround is the rebound in oil consumptio­n, with use by China above previrus levels, offering supermajor­s such as Exxon Mobil and BP a glimmer of hope after a grueling year.
 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? An e-commerce boom during the pandemic is spurring demand for diesel to power ships, trucks, planes and freight trains. UPS said it observed a seasonal peak almost without parallel.
Associated Press file photo An e-commerce boom during the pandemic is spurring demand for diesel to power ships, trucks, planes and freight trains. UPS said it observed a seasonal peak almost without parallel.

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