1 / 21

Meeting Future Distillate Needs

Meeting Future Distillate Needs. Jean Sentenac President & CEO. Worldwide refining: recent past context Future global demand for refined products 2020 Interest in heavier crudes Refining economics: “ The New Deal ” Impact on refining investments . Recent Past Context Facts.

corbin
Download Presentation

Meeting Future Distillate Needs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Meeting Future Distillate Needs Jean Sentenac President & CEO

  2. Worldwide refining: recent past context • Future global demand for refined products 2020 • Interest in heavier crudes • Refining economics: “The New Deal” • Impact on refining investments OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  3. Recent Past Context Facts • Last decade characterized by • Low level of investment in refining during the 1990’s • due to overcapacity and low margin • Limited investments in crude exploration and production • due to low crude prices • A sharp increase of world oil demand since 2003 • Market driver China, to a lesser extent emerging countries & the US Mbpd Oil Demand Growth Source: AIE OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  4. Projected Refined Products Demand 2005 - 2020 2005 Demand Geographical Breakdown 2005-2020 Incremental Demand by Region Mbpd Source: Hart WRFS, 2004 Edition OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  5. 38% Middle Distillate* 25% Gasoline Naphtha 2020 ~ 105 Mbpd Trend in Global Demand for Refined Products 70% 7% Middle Distillate* 31% 62% Gasoline 27% Naphtha 4% 1990 ~ 66 Mbpd OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  6. Global Demand for Refined Productsin 2020 Continuous change in product mix OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  7. Imbalances & Major Flows2005 4 Europe 35 23 4 25 North America 18 CIS -25 -10 6 -28 -4 Asia - Pacific 20 4 6 7 27 6 -10 Africa & Middle East -8 6 3 -5 Central & South America 12 Gasoline Jet/Kerosene All figures in Mt/y Diesel OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006 Fuel Oil

  8. Imbalances & Major Flows2015 50 30 Europe North America 40-45 CIS 40 -45 -60 Asia - Pacific 15 Africa & Middle East -45 -12 Gasoline Jet/Kerosene All figures in Mt/y Diesel OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  9. Crude Oil QualityWorld Trends Excluding Condensate Sulfur, wt.% API Gravity 1.70 34.7 1.65 34.2 1.60 Sulfur 1.55 33.7 Gravity 1.50 33.2 1.45 1.40 32.7 1.35 1.30 32.2 2000 2004 2010 2020 Source: Axens 2005 OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  10. Supply & Demand Tension • Trends • Average barrel of crude: heavier, more sulfur • Distillate demand is increasing • Residual fuel oil demand is decreasing • Product qualities will continue to rise • Consequences • Investments on the • Supply side: SCO production (non-conventional resources) or new refineries (conventional crudes) • Demand side: Hydrocrackers, cokers, FCCs • Hydrotreatreaters everywhere OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  11. Attractive Economics • High crude prices accompanied by increased product spreads • Increased HSFO - gas oil price differential • Beginning of 2004: 150 $/t • Today above 300 $/t  attractive investment conditions to convert residues into lighter products OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  12. HSFO & Diesel Prices1998 – Apr. 2006 $/ton Source: Platts On-Road Diesel FOB NWE 2005: Diff. > 300 $/t 2003: Diff. ~ 130 $/t HSFO (3.5%S) FOB NWE Brent Dated Prices, $/bbl OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  13. Light-Heavy Differential • Widening price differential betweenlight-sweet and heavy-sour crudes • Declining demand for HSFO • Lack of sufficient heavy-sour crude processing capacity • Widening price differentials have significantly contributed to increasing refining margins for refineries with heavy upgrading capacity OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  14. Refining Diff. vs. Crude Diff.1998 – Mar. 2006 Cracking – Hydroskimming Diff. Refining Margins, $/bbl Source: IEA, Platts Urals (API=31.3) 2004-2006 period Crude Price Diff: ~ 4 $/bbl Ref. Marg. Diff: ~ 2.5 $/bbl Brent (API=38.6) 2001-2003 period Crude Price Diff: ~ 1.5 $/bbl Ref. Marg. Diff: ~ 1 $/bbl Brent – Urals Crude Price Differential, $/bbl OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  15. The Market Direction • As crude prices increase, the light-heavy price spread increases • Operating margins are higher with heavier and more sour feeds • Margins increase further with increased refinery complexity Treating heavy, extra-heavy crudes requires more complex refineries: added conversion technology OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  16. Impact on Refining Industry • To satisfy additional demand, significant conversion capacity will be required through 2020 • Conversion capacity: + 12.3 Mbpd • Each year + 800,000 bpd • Middle distillate HDS capacity: + 10.4 Mbpd OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  17. Refining Investment Strategies • Europe, US, Japan  Continued investments in regulation attainment and conversion capacity  Creep capacity expansion will continue • Product demand growth areas (Asia)  New world-scale refineries • Producing countries  Refineries dedicated to export (Middle East)  Upgrading of non conventional hydrocarbon reserves (Canada, Venezuela) to produce synthetic oil to be refined in US / Europe OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  18. Projected Conversion Capacity Expansion 2005 - 2020 2005 Capacity Geographical Breakdown 2005-2020 Additional Capacity by Region Mbpd Source: Hart WRFS, 2005 Edition OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  19. Capacity Expansions 2005-2020 Geographical Breakdown Coking : +3.3 Mbpd (55 – 70 units) Catalytic Cracking: + 5 Mbpd (60 – 75 units) Hydrocracking: + 4 Mbpd (+1.1 AR/VRDS) (80 – 90 units) Source: Axens & Hart WRFS, 2005 Edition OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  20. Conclusions • Steadily increasing product demand • 1.6 - 1.7 %/y • Continuous change in product mix in favor of light transportation fuels • Declining crude quality (API, sulfur) • Increasingly stringent fuel specifications • Need 12.3 Mbpd additional conversion capacity by 2020 OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

  21. Conclusions • Attractive operational margins • Tight supply – additional investments required • High sulfur FO/GO differential above 300 $/t and expected to remain there for the foreseeable future • Widening LS and HS crude differential • Conditions favorable for investing in conversion technologies OAPEC-IFP Joint Seminar – Rueil-Malmaison, 2006

More Related