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Meeting U.S. Transportation Fuel Demand. John Hackworth Joanne Shore Energy Information Administration Energy & Transportation Panel August 2004. www.eia.doe.gov. Capacity Surplus Disappearing, Creating Short-Term Challenge. Operable Capacity. Gross Inputs. Source: EIA. Overview.
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Meeting U.S. Transportation Fuel Demand John Hackworth Joanne Shore Energy Information Administration Energy & Transportation Panel August 2004 www.eia.doe.gov
Capacity Surplus Disappearing, Creating Short-Term Challenge Operable Capacity Gross Inputs Source: EIA
Overview • Transportation demand growth – some uncertainties • A need for both U.S. capacity & import growth • New U.S. product specifications limit import sources • Will gasoline import availability grow?
Demand – A Crucial Factor Affecting Capacity Decisions • Future growth forecasts • What could affect future growth? Source: EIA
Transportation Demand Growth Drives EIA’s Reference Case Source: EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2004
Efficiency Could Affect Demand,But How Quickly? • Future Efficiency • Materials • Drag • Hybrid • Advanced Batteries • Advanced Diesel Fleet Weight 4063 lbs Fleet Weight 3273 lbs Fleet Weight 3870 lbs Source: U.S EPA, Light-Duty Automotive and Fuel Economy Trends: 1975-2003, April 2003.
Historical Efficiencies Affected Demand Relatively Quickly Source: Department of Transportation, FHA, Highway Statistics 2001, Table VM-1.
Role of Gasoline Imports – Now and in the Future • Historically, imports have been an essential supply source • Need increased import volume in future • Will import supply be available? • Why imports have been a competitive supply source • Future impacts of U.S. specification changes • The impacts of international supply/demand
Imports Have Been Economic Source: EIA
Gasoline Net Imports – An Essential Supply Source Import Destinations PADD 1 Sources of Supply 885 MB/D (2003) Source: EIA
Import Sources • Nearby dedicated suppliers • Canada • Virgin Islands • Venezuela • Nearby economic sources • Western Europe – symbiotic relationship • Eastern Europe • Latin America • Africa • Other incremental supply • Middle East and Asia
EU-15 Demand Mix May Imply Excess European Mogas Supply Source: History IEA; Forecast Purvin & Gertz
European Choices of New Vehicles Show Why Diesel Fuel Growth May Continue Source: ACEA www.acea.be
EU Hydrocracking Growing, But Not as Fast as Mogas/Diesel Demand Shift Source: EIA
No Change in NWE Price Incentive for Diesel over Gasoline Source: Bloomberg; Monthly Average NWE EN590 and 95 Octane Gasoline
2004 Specification Effects on Summer Imports into New York/New Jersey Source: EIA
Changing U.S. Sulfur Specifications May Change Import Sources Gasoline Sulfur Specifications (ppm) Source: Hart International Fuel Quality Center
Some Historical Suppliers Cannot Produce Low Sulfur Gasoline Source: EIA, Form EIA-814
Shifts in Gasoline Import Sources with Changes to Lower Sulfur Gasoline Source: EIA, Form EIA-814
Stable or Increasing W. Europe gasoline/diesel imbalance continues Increased E. Europe export capability Dedicated U.S. import sources remain Potentially high U.S. gasoline margins Decreasing U.S. gasoline spec changes limit supply sources in short run Demand outside U.S. growing faster than refining capacity Gasoline Import Availability
Factors Affecting International Product Supplies • High world demand growth • Increases capacity utilization (especially Asia) • Supports high crude oil prices • Increasing imports and product prices • Import implications of world refining capacity utilization • Asian demand rebound and China’s growth • Capacity growth lagging • Ability to produce light clean products in non-OECD areas
Annual Demand Changes Vary Considerably Source: EIA, IEA
How Tight is World Refining Capacity? • Recent claims of being maximum sustainable capacity are exaggerated • Comparing world product demand and capacity can be misleading • Must look at regional utilizations • However, demand growth is outpacing capacity growth – for the moment
Overview of World Capacity Utilization (Percent Gross Inputs/Distillation) Source: EIA, IEA & BP
U.S. and Western European Trends Source: IEA
Singapore Utilization Pattern Source: EIA, IEA, BP
Downstream Capacity Profiles Source: Oil and Gas Journal Refinery Survey, December 2003
Capacity Additions – Asia & M.E. Thousand Barrels Per Day Asia (6) Middle East Exporters (4) Source: Oil and Gas Journal & Press Releases
Capacity Additions – Europe & U.S. Thousand Barrels Per Day Europe (6) U.S. Source: Oil and Gas Journal & Press Releases
Refining Margin Comparisons Source: BP Statistical Review 2004
Looking Ahead 3-5 Years: Capacity Growth Less Than Demand Growth • Capacity lagged demand for past 5 years • Forecasted gasoline demand implies the need for 1 to 2 MMB/D of added capacity in the next 5 years. • Improved margins will encourage capacity • But other environment investment requirements may detract • New product specifications reduce yield in short term
Looking Ahead 3-5 Years:Import Availability Still A Question • While the need for product imports increases, changing U.S. specifications may reduce the number of import sources in the short term • Some changes were met this year, but future specifications more stringent. • Worldwide refinery utilization increases will have little impact on U.S. import availability
Conclusion • Petroleum demand will likely increase over the near term. • Increases in both U.S. capacity and product imports will be needed • However, the balance between the 2 supply sources is uncertain • Both capacity expansion and import growth face large challenges