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Oil recovery waits for international flying to return

Oil recovery waits for international flying to return

September 22, 2020
inCommodities, Oil and Gas
Oil recovery waits for international flying to return

Used oil barrels are stacked at a storage facility in Seattle, Washington February 12, 2015. REUTERS/Jason Redmond

Jet fuel consumption remains the hardest hit section of the global oil market as passengers avoid air travel as a result of the pandemic and government travel restrictions.

The specific problems of the jet market explain why refinery margins for closely related distillates such as diesel are currently being hit much harder than benchmark oil prices.

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Jet’s travails have helped push distillate margins to their lowest levels for more than a decade and are undercutting refinery demand for crude (“Bloated diesel stocks weigh down global oil market”, Reuters, Sept. 17).

Sustained recovery in distillate margins and crude oil prices will therefore depend on a wider resumption of cross-border aviation.

But an early resumption of long-haul flights is currently looking less likely than a few months ago, given the resurgence of coronavirus cases in many parts of the world.

So an upturn in jet consumption and with it distillate margins and crude oil prices depends on one or more of three factors:

(1) Early deployment of an effective COVID-19 vaccine;

(2) Alternative methods of infection control (e.g. rapid testing or improved contact tracing and isolation); or

(3) Lifting air travel restrictions with or without a vaccine.

NATIONAL BORDERS
Quarantines and other infection controls have mostly been imposed on a national, or occasionally continental basis, and on potentially infective passengers rather than manufactured products.

As a result, passenger aviation has been hit much harder than freight, and within the passenger sector, long-haul inter-continental flights have been more severely impacted than short-haul and domestic services.

Globally, air freight tonne-kilometres were down just 18% in June compared with passenger revenue-kilometres down 87%, according to the International Civil Aviation Organization.

In Hong Kong, which has adopted some of the strictest quarantine requirements, air cargo volumes were down just 2% in August from a year earlier while passenger numbers, excluding transit passengers, were down 99%.

On the passenger side, countries with a large domestic market, including the United States and China, have seen a stronger rebound than countries that depend on international departures and arrivals such as Britain. (“Demand for jet fuel in the U.S. is recovering faster than in many other markets”, EIA, Sept. 2).

China’s passenger aviation volume was down by around 40% in August compared with the same month a year earlier, based on passenger-kilometres flown, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

By contrast, Britain’s Heathrow airport reported passenger numbers were down by 69% in August for domestic and short-haul flights within Europe and down by 92% for long-haul flights outside Europe.

Business-related travel has been hit harder than leisure journeys as a result of the cancellation of conferences and in-person customer visits for infection control and to reduce corporate spending during the recession.

Most aviation experts expect business travel to recover more slowly than leisure journeys over the next 12-24 months, mirroring the experience after previous business cycle downturns.

The recession’s lingering effects will encourage corporate managers to focus on cost control even once coronavirus restrictions are lifted, and discouraging discretionary flights is the easiest target for short-term savings.

JET CONSUMPTION
Global jet fuel consumption was around 8 million barrels per day in 2019, or around 8% of global petroleum consumption, according to BP (“Statistical review of world energy”, June 2020).

But it has been one of the fastest-growing sections of the market over the last decade, with consumption growing by almost 2.7% per year between 2009 and 2019, compared with 1.6% for all petroleum products.

While jet consumption remains a relatively small component of the total petroleum market, it is much larger compared with the market for other similar middle distillates.

In 2019, jet fuel accounted for 22% of worldwide consumption of middle distillates, a group of fuels which also includes diesel, heating oil, gasoil and kerosene, and totalled around 36 million barrels per day.

The pandemic-driven slump in aviation, especially fuel-hungry long-haul passenger aviation, has cut jet consumption by more than half.

Even with its domestic market, jet fuel consumption in the U.S. is still down by more than 55% compared with year-ago levels, according to weekly estimates from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

DISTILLATE OVERSUPPLY
Jet fuel, with strict quality specifications, is normally a premium product and makes a big contribution to refinery margins and profitability.

Following the epidemic, however, refiners have been forced to dump unwanted jet fuel into the broader and less-profitable pool for other middle distillates.

The diversion of surplus jet fuel has contributed to oversupply and bloated stocks of other middle distillates and is weighing on refining margins.

Source: Reuters
Tags: commodityoil
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