In very round numbers:
- US storage: 500 million bbls
- Saudi storage: 250 million bbls
- global demand: 100 million bbls/day
- daily production:
- US: 12 million bopd
- Russia: 11 million bopd
- Saudi Arabia: 10 million bopd
In recent weeks, the crude oil adjustment has been growing in absolute value, as high as 881,000 barrels for the week ending May 24.In my book, 881,000 bbls can be rounded to one million bbls.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) Weekly Petroleum Status Report (WPSR) provides weekly estimates of U.S. crude oil supply, including a measure of how well the supply of crude oil and the disposition of crude oil balance with each other.
This measure—referred to as the adjustment—is a derived term equal to the difference between supply and disposition. If the reported supply and disposition of crude oil balanced perfectly each week, the adjustment would equal zero. For several reasons, however, this is rarely the case.
Weekly U.S. crude oil supply and disposition data are based on a combination of EIA survey data, U.S. Customs and Border Protection data, and modeled estimates. All statistical samples using survey data have small but unavoidable imprecisions, and model estimated data’s precision can vary. This imprecision in estimating each element of the crude oil balance can result in some over- and under-estimation in both supply and disposition.
In recent weeks, the crude oil adjustment has been growing in absolute value, as high as 881,000 barrels [sic; see comment below] for the week ending May 24.
However, this is still relatively small, when compared with the entire U.S. crude oil balance, less than 2.5% on a rolling four-week average basis (the sum of production, imports, exports, and refinery inputs) (Figure 1 at the linked article).
Although an increased adjustment is, in some part, the result of the inherent challenge of estimating perfectly each reporting period, increasing volumes of U.S. crude oil production and exports and other factors may also play a role. EIA will continue to evaluate crude oil data to identify possible sources of the higher crude oil adjustment.
Week
|
Week Ending
|
Change
|
Million Bbls Storage
|
Week 0
|
November 21, 2018
|
4.9
|
446.9
|
Week 1
|
November 28, 2018
|
3.6
|
450.5
|
Week 2
|
December 6, 2018
|
-7.3
|
443.2
|
Week 3
|
December 12, 2018
|
-1.2
|
442.0
|
Week 4
|
December 19, 2018
|
-0.5
|
441.5
|
Week 5
|
December 28, 2018
|
0.0
|
441.4
|
Week 6
|
January 4, 2019
|
0.0
|
441.4
|
Week 7
|
January 9, 2019
|
-1.7
|
439.7
|
Week 8
|
January 16, 2019
|
-2.7
|
437.1
|
Week 9
|
January 24, 2019
|
8.0
|
445.0
|
Week 10
|
January 31, 2019
|
0.9
|
445.9
|
Week 11
|
February 6, 2019
|
1.3
|
447.2
|
Week 12
|
February 13, 2019
|
3.6
|
450.8
|
Week 13
|
February 21, 2019
|
3.7
|
454.5
|
Week 14
|
February 27, 2019
|
-8.6
|
445.9
|
Week 15
|
March 6, 2019
|
7.1
|
452.9
|
Week 16
|
March 13, 2019
|
-3.9
|
449.1
|
Week 17
|
March 20, 2019
|
-9.6
|
439.5
|
Week 18
|
March 27, 2019
|
2.8
|
442.3
|
Week 19
|
April 3, 2019
|
7.2
|
449.5
|
Week 20
|
April 10, 2019
|
7.0
|
456.5
|
Week 21
|
April 17, 2019
|
-1.4
|
455.2
|
Week 22
|
April 24, 2019
|
5.5
|
460.1
|
Week 23
|
May 1, 2019
|
9.9
|
470.6
|
Week 24
|
May 8, 2019
|
-4.0
|
466.6
|
Week 25
|
May 15, 2019
|
5.4
|
472.0
|
Week 26
|
May 22, 2019
|
4.7
|
476.8
|
Week 27
|
May 30, 2019
|
-0.3
|
476.5
|
Week 28
|
June 5, 2019
|
6.8
|
483.3
|
Week 29
|
June 12, 2019
|
2.2
|
485.5
|
Week 30
|
June 19, 2019
|
-3.1
|
482.4
|
Week 31
|
June 26, 2019
|
-12.8
|
469.6
|
Week 32
|
July 3, 2019
|
-1.1
|
468.5
|
Week 33
|
July 10, 2019
|
-9.5
|
459.0
|
Week 34
|
July 17, 2019
|
-3.1
|
455.9
|
$55.16 | 7/18/2019 | 07/18/2018 | 07/18/2017 | 07/18/2016 | 07/18/2015 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active Rigs | 55 | 67 | 59 | 30 | 73 |
The House voted overwhelmingly to repeal a tax Wednesday intended to fund the Affordable Care Act, preserving tax breaks for employer-sponsored insurance plans favored by large corporations.Going into this, my "take" from the mainstream media was that the millennial journalists writing about the upcoming vote weren't really sure how the vote would go, or more likely they did know but were hoping to have some influence on the outcome. They didn't.
In a reversal of the usual partisan roles, Democrats rather than Republicans led the charge to kill a key part of Obamacare.
Democrats have generally opposed measures to chip away at President Barack Obama’s signature legislative achievement, but the Cadillac tax has been unpopular since it became part of the code.
The measure to repeal it, H.R. 748, was passed under a fast-track procedure requiring two-thirds support among House members.
Yet popularity doesn’t necessarily mean good policy, said Marc Goldwein, senior vice president at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. Politicians don’t like the tax on health benefits, but nearly every economist thinks the Cadillac tax or a similar measure is necessary to help slow the rise in health-care costs and curb overuse of health services, he added.
Brangus is a hardy and popular breed of beef cattle, a cross between an Angus and a Brahman. Animals eligible for registration as Brangus cattle are 5/8 Angus and 3/8 Brahman. Brangus is a registered trademark of the International Brangus Breeders Association (IBBA).So where did this all come from? It turns out that this particular breeding is a strategy for tick resistance in tropical cattle and other tropical/sub-tropical maladies.
A Kinder Morgan Inc.-led natural gas conduit is getting blowback in a place that’s so far been a refuge for the embattled pipeline industry: Texas. And it comes as drillers in the Lone Star state need pipeline space more than ever.Disclaimer: this is not an investment site. Do not make any investment, financial, job, career, travel, or relationship decisions based on anything you read at this blog or think you might have read at this blog.
The $2 billion Permian Highway Pipeline would carry gas from America’s most prolific shale basin in West Texas to the Gulf Coast, helping to relieve bottlenecks that have led producers to burn off enough fuel to supply every home in Texas.
But landowners along the route are staging a fight, arguing against the company’s use of eminent domain and urging city and county officials to consider potential environmental and safety consequences.
The dispute poses a risk of pitting environmentalists concerned about the burning of excess gas -- called flaring -- against property owners who don’t want a pipeline running through their backyard or ranch. Oil explorers in West Texas are producing record amounts of gas as a by-product of crude drilling, and without new pipelines, their only option is to flare the gas into the sky.
Demand for liquefied natural gas (LNG) from South and Southeast Asia will more than quintuple by 2040, reaching 236 million tonnes per annum (mmtpa), Wood Mackenzie predicted Wednesday. In a research note emailed to Rigzone, WoodMac noted that nearly one-half of the Asian demand spike will come from two major markets: Indonesia and India. Asti Asra, WoodMac principal analyst, noted that different sectors will drive demand growth in India and Indonesia – expected to require 63 mmpta and 43 mmtpa, respectively, of LNG in 2040.
$57.00 | 7/18/2019 | 07/18/2018 | 07/18/2017 | 07/18/2016 | 07/18/2015 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active Rigs | 56 | 67 | 59 | 30 | 73 |
Natural gas storage activity this spring suggested extremely bearish fundamentals.
The market injected gas into storage at a record pace, well above year-ago and 5-year-average levels.
The high injection rate was in part a result of demand loss as weather abruptly moderated in April and May. However, a look at injections on a weather-adjusted basis suggests there’s another dynamic at play — namely, that increased baseload demand for gas in the power sector amplified the effects of the mild weather this spring, lowering demand even more than temperatures alone would indicate. Moreover, that same dynamic could have an opposite, equally extreme effect during the hotter months when power generation is the primary driver of gas demand. Today, we look at the latest gas storage and demand trends, and what they can tell us about the balance of injection season.
The winter of 2018-19 was one of records and extremes for the gas market, including record production and demand, and both the highest and lowest spot gas prices ever recorded in the U.S. physical gas market. It’s safe to say that theme extended into spring. Lower-48 gas production continued setting record highs, as did demand, particularly from LNG exports. And we can add one more extreme to that list — some of the highest storage injections seen this decade for the April-May time frame.
Injections in April and May of 2019 totaled 332 Bcf and 524 Bcf, respectively, exceeding both year-ago and 5-year-average levels (dashed red oval). In April, injections came just 24 Bcf shy of the highest total injection for that month seen this decade (356 Bcf in 2010). By contrast, the net storage change was a net withdrawal of 11 Bcf in the comparable weeks last year, and the next-highest injection level in the past 5 years was 250 Bcf 4 years ago in 2015.
The higher-than-normal injections continued through May, but not to the extent they had in April. May’s total injection of 524 Bcf was the highest of the decade and 142 Bcf above last year, though it was only 2 Bcf higher than the 5-year high of 522 Bcf seen in 2015. June injections also were above average, at 404 Bcf, but not as high as the 429 Bcf seen in June 2014. When compared to 5-year average, the deviations in storage injections have swung from being as much as 180 Bcf higher than the historical average in April, to less than 80 Bcf higher in May and then to about 90 Bcf higher in June.