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Thursday, November 12, 2020

WTI, OPEC Basket Continue To Climb -- Three Wells Coming Off Confidential List -- November 12, 2020

Weekly EIA petroleum report, link here. Because of the holiday, this report will be released a day later than usual, later this morning:

  • US crude oil in storage increased by 4.3 million bbls;
  • US crude oil in storage now stands at 488.7 million bbls, about 6% above the already-fat-five--year average;
  • refiners operating at 74.5% of their operable capacity;
  • distillate fuel inventories decreased by 5.4 million bls last week but are still 15% above an already-fat-five-year average;
  • US crude oil imports averaged 5.5 million bopd, up about a half million bopd; the four-week average is about 13% less than same four-week period last year;
  • jet fuel supplied was down 43.5% compared with same four-week period last year

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Update On COP / Norway

From yesterday:

From today, the Oil & Gas Journal:

ConocoPhillips will further appraise a Norwegian Sea gas condensate discovery to determine potential flow rates, the reservoir’s ultimate resource recovery, and plans for development. 
Preliminary estimates place the size of the discovery at 50-190 million bbl of recoverable oil equivalent. 
Well 6507/4-1 (Warka)—the first in PL 1009—was drilled by the Leiv Eiriksson drilling rig 22 miles northwest of Heidrun field and 150 miles from the coast of Norway in 1,312 ft of water to a total depth of 16,355 ft. It was terminated in the Lange formation from the Early Cretaceous Age. 
Primary and secondary exploration targets were rocks from Albian and Aptian Ages, respectively, in the Early Cretaceous (Intra Lange formation sandstones), the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate (NPD) said. 
According to NPD, in the primary exploration target, the well encountered an 88-ft gas column in Lange formation sandstone layers, with moderate but uncertain reservoir quality. Gas-water contact was not encountered, and no reservoir rocks were encountered in the secondary target. The well has been permanently plugged.

OPEC basket, link here: surges. Up 4%. Trading at $43.42.

For the archives: looking for $5.00-gasoline under the Biden administration. Never fails.

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Back to the Bakken

Active rigs:

$42.08
11/12/202011/12/201911/12/201811/12/201711/12/2016
Active Rigs1554665238

Three wells coming off the confidential list -- Thursday, November 12, 2020:

RBN Energy: new LNG-fueled ships and LNG bunkering infrastructure coming online, part 2.

A few years ago, the most damning things skeptics could say about using LNG as a fuel for large ocean-going ships were that very few ships were fitted with LNG storage tanks and that there was little or no infrastructure in place at most ports to load the fuel. Well, they can’t say that anymore. About 170 large, LNG-powered vessels already are in operation around the world — including a French containership that just set a world record for carrying the most containers — and another 220 or so are on order. Just as important, the vast majority of key ports either have robust LNG bunkering operations in place or are in advanced stages of developing them. Today, we continue our series with a look at LNG’s growing acceptance and use as a ship fuel.

The International Maritime Organization (IMO) governs the safety, security, and environmental performance of the more than 50,000 tankers, dry bulkers, container ships, and other commercial vessels that ply international waters. For more than a decade now, IMO has been ratcheting down the limits on sulfur emissions from these ships, most recently on January 1, 2020, when the cap on allowable sulfur content in bunker fuel was slashed to 0.5% from the old 3.5% limit. [An even stricter 0.1%-sulfur cap remains in place in the IMO’s Emission Control Areas (ECAs), which started with Europe’s Baltic and North seas, then was adopted in areas within 200 nautical miles of the U.S. and Canadian coasts.] As we said in Part 1, there are three ways that shipowners and charterers can comply with the new 0.5% rule, which is commonly known as IMO 2020: (1) switch to very-low-sulfur fuel oil (VLSFO) or marine gasoil, (2) continue using high-sulfur fuel oil (HSFO) and install scrubbers to remove sulfur from the exhaust gases, and (3) use liquefied natural gas (LNG) as bunker fuel, typically with VLSFO as a dual-fuel option.

Our understanding is that using LNG as bunker fuel offers a number of important benefits. Perhaps the most compelling is that, in addition to easily meeting the sulfur-related requirements of IMO 2020, fueling ships with LNG generates about 20% less carbon dioxide (CO2, a key greenhouse gas, or GHG) than fueling them with VLSFO or scrubber-mitigated HSFO. That is significant because, in addition to implementing tougher and tougher rules on sulfur emissions, the IMO is requiring that ocean-going vessels significantly improve their energy efficiency and in 2023 is expected to implement requirements to reduce the international shipping sector’s GHG emissions by at least 40% below their 2008 level by 2030 and as much as 70% by 2050. So, by investing in LNG-powered ships now, shipping companies would, in essence, be preparing for compliance with anticipated GHG mandates. We should note here (as we did last time) that LNG is viewed by some as a sort of transition shipping fuel to zero-carbon alternatives such as liquefied biomethane (LBM) and liquefied synthetic methane (LSM), either of which could use the same bunkering infrastructure and on-ship fuel storage and engines as LNG.

2 comments:

  1. -Interesting that overall fuel inventory (crude and products) was down by 10+ million barrels looking at table 1. Crude production remained at 10 million barrels per day. Exports were -180 million barrels per day.

    -Perfect sense that ships are using LGN for fuel. Even at $10/mmbtu, cost is about $1.40 equivalent per gallon of bunker fuel. A large ship has enough space and structure to install a dual cycle NG system to get efficiently double of a turbine or piston engine that could cut fuel use by 1/2

    -If Biden causes gasoline to spike to $5 per gallon, then I can afford to upgrade my RV. They will get dirt cheap with fuel that high. :-) Then in a couple of years fuel will go way down in price with demand falling and production increasing due to banks loaning money to oil production companies. Same story, different decade.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You are absolutely correct; my portfolio will look great with higher-priced oil and $5 gasoline (California). I just feel badly for the less fortunate.

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