ОБЪЕДИНЕНИЕ ЛИДЕРОВ НЕФТЕГАЗОВОГО СЕРВИСА И МАШИНОСТРОЕНИЯ РОССИИ
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Среда, 10 марта 2021 21:22

EIA: This Week in Petroleum - 10 March 2021 - eng Избранное

OPEC production restraint will lower global inventories, but higher prices will stimulate U.S. crude oil production

At their March 4 meeting, members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and partner countries (OPEC+) announced they would maintain crude oil production cuts through April, except for relatively small production increases from Russia and Kazakhstan. The announcement also noted that Saudi Arabia would maintain its additional 1.0 million barrel per day (b/d) voluntary production cut through the end of April. In February 2021, OPEC+ cuts, combined with supply disruptions in the United States, contributed to monthly global petroleum inventory withdrawals that the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates totaled 3.7 million b/d, the largest monthly withdrawal since December 2002. The Brent crude oil futures price averaged $63 per barrel (b) in early March leading up to the OPEC+ meeting, and the OPEC+ announcement put further upward pressure on crude oil prices. Front-month Brent futures briefly surpassed $70/b in intraday trading in the days following the announcement, not only because of the announcement but also because of an attack on the Ras Tanura oil facilities in Saudi Arabia on March 7. As a result of the extension of OPEC+ production cuts, EIA expects draws on global petroleum and other liquids inventories of 1.8 million b/d and 0.6 million b/d in the first and second quarters of 2021, respectively, according to EIA’s March Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO) (Figure 1).

Figure 1. World liquid fuels production and consumption balance.

At its meeting on December 3, 2020, OPEC+ announced it would limit its production increase in January 2021 from 2.0 million b/d to only 0.5 million b/d. At its meeting on January 5, 2021, OPEC+ announced that it would maintain January production levels through the first quarter. In addition, Saudi Arabia unilaterally contributed 1.0 million b/d of additional cuts for February and March. Since the OPEC+ December announcement, the group has committed to maintaining more flexible production targets in response to the global demand recovery. This commitment has contributed to regular changes in output targets, resulting in revisions to EIA’s 2021 OPEC production forecast. Since the initial production cuts in May 2020, EIA has reduced its annual average 2021 OPEC crude oil production forecast by 1.6 million b/d to 26.8 million b/d (Figure 2).

Figure 2. OPEC 2021 crude oil production forecast by STEO vintage.

The sustained OPEC+ production curtailment through April suggests that supply will remain constrained in the near term, even as demand continues to increase. As a result, EIA expects that further inventory withdrawals to meet rising crude oil demand will support crude oil prices through at least the end of April. In its February STEO, EIA forecast that OPEC would have begun relaxing production cuts in April, but following the March 4 announcement, EIA now expects production cuts to relax beginning in May, which is reflected in the March STEO. EIA expects OPEC crude oil production will increase to an average of 26.6 million b/d in May, which would be an increase of 1.5 million b/d compared with the January–April average.

In the March STEO, EIA forecasts Brent crude oil prices will average $67/b in March and April 2021. As a result of EIA’s continued expectation of downward crude oil price pressures emerging in the coming months as the oil market becomes more balanced, Brent is forecast to fall to an average of $58/b during the second half of 2021. EIA forecasts West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil prices to average $63.50/b in both March and April 2021 and to fall to $55/b in the second half of 2021. Market expectations of future price uncertainty is reflected in the value of WTI futures and options, which can be used to determine an implicit market-derived 95% confidence interval. As of March 4, 2021, the value of futures and options contracts determined the lower and upper bound confidence intervals of $44/b and $83/b, respectively, for the June 2021 WTI contract. The 95% confidence interval widens considerably over time (Figure 3).

Figure 3. WTI crude oil price and NYMEX confidence intervals.

EIA’s forecast of downward oil price pressure and increased crude oil availability has several key uncertainties. The speed of actual demand recovery, based on COVID-19 vaccination rates and the degree to which travel and employment conditions return to pre-COVID levels, remains an important uncertainty on the demand side. At the same time, the degree to which OPEC+ production cuts will continue after April remains a source of uncertainty on the supply side, especially because increasing crude oil prices will encourage OPEC+ participants to agree to production increases in later meetings or to relax compliance with the existing agreement. Finally, the responsiveness of U.S. tight oil production to higher oil prices is also uncertain.

EIA’s forecast of lower oil prices later in 2021 and 2022 depends in part on the responsiveness of U.S. shale production to recent high prices, which, as discussed in EIA’s March 3 This Week in Petroleum, suggests producers have been adding rigs and completing wells in recent months. The recent increase in crude oil prices means that more U.S. tight oil acreage is profitable. EIA expects U.S. crude oil production will average 11.4 million b/d during the second half of 2021 and rise to an average of 12.0 million b/d in 2022. EIA assesses that if oil prices were to remain at current levels, growing U.S tight oil production would cause global oil inventories to grow persistently by early 2022. However, producers may not deploy capital in the same way they have in the past at given price levels, adding further uncertainty to EIA’s crude oil production and price forecasts.

At the same time, high prices also encourage OPEC+ to relax production targets given current, very large amounts of spare crude oil production capacity, which is available to come online if OPEC+ member countries decide to increase production. To some degree, then, the more prices rise in the near term, the more future downward price pressures they bring.

U.S. average regular gasoline and diesel prices increase

The U.S. average regular gasoline retail price increased 6 cents to $2.77 per gallon on March 8, 40 cents higher than the same time last year. The Rocky Mountain price increased more than 14 cents to $2.71 per gallon, the Gulf Coast price increased more than 8 cents to $2.50 per gallon, the West Coast price increased nearly 7 cents to $3.34 per gallon, the East Coast price increased more than 5 cents to $2.70 per gallon, and the Midwest price increased more than 4 cents to $2.71 per gallon.

The U.S. average diesel fuel price increased more than 7 cents to $3.14 per gallon on March 3, 33 cents higher than a year ago. The Rocky Mountain price increased nearly 15 cents to $3.13 per gallon, the Gulf Coast price increased more than 9 cents to $2.93 per gallon, the Midwest price increased nearly 9 cents to $3.13 per gallon, the West Coast price increased more than 5 cents to $3.59 per gallon, and the East Coast price increased more than 3 cents to $3.12 per gallon.

Propane/propylene inventories decline

U.S. propane/propylene stocks decreased by 47,000 barrels last week to 41.2 million barrels as of March 5, 2021, 7.3 million barrels (15.0%) less than the five-year (2016-2020) average inventory levels for this same time of year. Rocky Mountain/West Coast and Gulf Coast inventories decreased by 0.2 million barrels and 0.1 million barrels, respectively. Midwest and East Coast inventories increased by 0.2 million barrels and 0.1 million barrels, respectively.

Residential heating oil prices increase, propane prices decrease

As of March 8, 2021, residential heating oil prices averaged nearly $2.89 per gallon, almost 4 cents per gallon higher than last week’s price and nearly 14 cents per gallon higher than last year’s price at this time. Wholesale heating oil prices averaged almost $2.08 per gallon, more than 9 cents per gallon above last week’s price and more than 61 cents per gallon above last year’s price.

Residential propane prices averaged nearly $2.42 per gallon, more than 8 cents per gallon lower than last week’s price but almost 46 cents per gallon above last year’s price. Wholesale propane prices averaged more than $1.16 per gallon, nearly 12 cents per gallon below last week’s price but more than 63 cents per gallon above last year’s price.

For questions about This Week in Petroleum, contact the Petroleum Markets Team at 202-586-4522.


Retail prices (dollars per gallon)

Conventional Regular Gasoline Prices Graph.
Residential Heating Oil Prices Graph.
On-Highway Diesel Fuel Prices Graph.
Residential Propane Prices Graph.
 Retail pricesChange from last
 03/08/21WeekYear
Gasoline 2.771 0.060up 0.396up
Diesel 3.143 0.071up 0.329up
Heating Oil 2.889 0.037up 0.138up
Propane 2.417 -0.081down 0.455up

Futures prices (dollars per gallon*)

Crude Oil Futures Price Graph
RBOB Regular Gasoline Futures Price Graph
Heating Oil Futures Price Graph
 
 Futures pricesChange from last
 03/05/21WeekYear
Crude oil 66.09 4.59up 24.81up
Gasoline 2.065 0.188up 0.676up
Heating oil 1.944 0.087up 0.559up
*Note: Crude oil price in dollars per barrel.

Stocks (million barrels)

U.S. Crude Oil Stocks Graph
U.S. Distillate Stocks Graph
U.S. Gasoline Stocks Graph
U.S. Propane Stocks Graph
 StocksChange from last
 03/05/21WeekYear
Crude oil 498.4 13.8up 46.6up
Gasoline 231.6 -11.9down -15.4down
Distillate 137.5 -5.5down 9.4up
Propane 41.199 -0.047down -20.330down

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