Tuesday, 9 August 2016

Iran Begins Shipping Euro 4 Compliant Oil

In Freight News 09/08/2016

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The National Iranian Oil Products Distribution Company (NIOPDC) has announced that the country has deployed its first Euro 4-compliant gas oil shipment to global markets.
Mahmoud Taherizadeh, Director of the Mahshahr region for NIOPDC stated: “In the first four months of the current Iranian calendar year, about 184 million liters of diesel fuel with Euro 4 standards have been exported from Mahshahr oil terminal… In addition to diesel oil, approximately 960 million liters of mazut were also deployed to world markets over the span of four months.”
He said that for the same period last year, mazut shipments totaled 472 million leaders. Taherizadeh said that since no oil gas cargo had been shipped from Mahshahr terminal in the prior year, this is the first time in the current year that exports of Euro 4-compliant diesel oil have been shipped from the terminal.
Taherizadeh said that the Mahshahr terminal has become a “major corridor” for petroleum exports, and that diesel and mazut exports are expected to continue to grow. In the current Iranian year, which begins on 20 March, the country has exported an average of 9 to 9.5 million liters of gas oil per day. Those numbers show an increase of two times the amount from the same period in the previous year.
India is one of Iran’s oil customers. Last month, the country imported 461,000 barrels of oil per day from Iran, which was up 110 percent from July of last year, and 21 percent increase from June. Vehicle sales in India remain on the rise, increasing the country’s demand for oil.
Iran continues to strive to recover from losses incurred during the nuclear sanctions. While the sanctions were in place, India paid for Iranian imports in rupees, which Iran then used in turn to make purchases from India.
Source: Oilprice

OPEC Still Faces Same Obstacles to Agree on Oil-Output Limit

In Oil & Companies News 09/08/2016

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An informal OPEC meeting next month is unlikely to deliver any agreement to limit production because several members including Iran are still pumping below capacity.
Members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries are planning to hold talks in Algeria next month when they gather for a meeting of the International Energy Forum, the group’s president Mohammed Al Sada said Monday. But the same obstacles that prevented an agreement on proposals to freeze output in April or fix a new production target in June are still there, according to UBS Group AG.
“We still haven’t reached the moment when OPEC members will agree to a production agreement, as Iran has not yet recovered its pre-sanction production levels,” Giovanni Staunovo, an analyst at UBS, said by e-mail. “Nigerian and Libyan oil output are also currently below capacity.”
Oil tumbled into a bear market last week, ending a recovery that saw prices almost double from a 12-year low in February. That increased the pressure on many OPEC member countries that are still unable to balance their budgets. Al Sada’s comments indicate the group is concerned by the renewed slide in prices, according to Robin Mills, chief executive officer of consultant Qamar Energy.
Iranian Opposition
Oil dropped from the highest close in two weeks, slipping as much as 44 cents, or 1 percent, to $42.58 a barrel. OPEC shifted to targeting market share over price in 2014, adopting a Saudi-led strategy to keep pumping in the face of oversupply. Efforts by some OPEC members over the past two years to limit the group’s output have come to nothing.

In Doha in April, talks with other producers including Russia to freeze output ended in failure after Saudi Arabia decided it wouldn’t back the accord as long as Iran refused to join. At the group’s June meeting, another proposal for production targets went nowhere. Before both gatherings, Iran had ruled out any limits on its output as it ramped up production after the easing of international sanctions in January.
Iran’s crude production increased by about a quarter since the start of the year to 3.6 million barrels a day in July, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. However, it has yet to fully recover the levels pumped before sanctions were imposed four years ago, according to the country’s Deputy Oil Minister Amir Hossein Zamaninia.
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Crude production in Libya remains at less than a quarter of its level before the ouster of Moammar Al Qaddafi in 2011 as political rivalries divide the North African country. In Nigeria, a resurgence of rebel attacks against oil infrastructure is holding output close to the lowest level since 1989, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Holding an informal meeting is an opportunistic, low-risk strategy for OPEC to deal with the problem of falling prices, said David Fyfe, the head of research at oil trading house Gunvor Group Ltd. in Geneva.
“They’re all going to be in the same place anyway towards the end of September, why not put out there that they’re going to talk about production policy?” Fyfe said by phone. “If it doesn’t work, there’s less downside” than for a failed formal meeting.
Ministers probably hope markets will react to the coming deliberations like they did during the run up to the Doha meeting, said Miswin Mahesh, commodities analyst at Barclays Plc. Although the April freeze proposal ultimately failed, the talks still contributed to the rally in prices from 12-year lows earlier this year.
“The jawbone worked the last time” because the freeze talks helped reverse sentiment, Mahesh said by e-mail from London. OPEC is trying to do the same again and “give time for markets to balance and to slow down the freefall in prices.”
Source: Bloomberg

Rosneft plans to increase Yugansk oil output to 1.37 mbpd

In Oil & Companies News 09/08/2016

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Russia’s Rosneft, the world’s top listed oil company by output, plans to increase production at its key unit, adding to the global glut, it said on Monday.
Moscow sees no need for new talks with fellow producers on joint actions on markets. It (Other OTC: ITGL – news) was part of a group of global producers which were trying to agree on an oil output levels freeze in April to help to speed up a supply/demand rebalance. Talks failed as Saudi Arabia refused to sign a deal without Iran.
Oil prices rose on Monday lifted by reports of renewed talks by some members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to restrain output.
Russia, the world’s top oil producer, sees no prerequisites for new talks on freezing oil production yet but is open to negotiations, Energy Minister Alexander Novak said on Monday.
“If other countries raise the issue of a freeze, we are ready to discuss this,” he told reporters.
“But the position of Russia is that the prerequisites for this have not yet come to pass, considering that prices are still at a more or less normal level.”
Russia was pumping at an average of 10.85 million barrels per day (bpd) in July, slightly up from June thanks to increases at some of its biggest producers, including Rosneft.
Rosneft, which saw its oil production down 1 percent last year to 202.8 million tonnes (4.07 million bpd), has recently announced an ambitious drilling programme in a move to turn around the trend. Rosneft sees its oil output flat in 2016.
Drilling continues at Yuganskneftegaz, a subsidiary of defunct Yukos and Rosneft’s biggest producing unit.
Yuganskneftegaz’s head, Khasan Tatriyev, told reporters that his company is targeting an annual oil production of 68 million tonnes – or 1.4 million bpd – by 2020. Last year, oil output at Yugansk was at 62.4 million tonnes.
The planned increase to 68 million tones (1.37 million barrels per day) would come from a heavier drilling programme and going after hard-to-extract oil, Tatriyev said. Hard-to-extract oil is expected to account for 15 percent of Yugansk’s output by then from around 5 percent last year.
According to Yugansk’s presentation, it plans to almost double production of unconventional oil to 5.7 million tonnes this year.
Source: Reuters (Reporting by Olesya Astakhova; Writing by Katya Golubkova; Editing by Tom Hogue and William Hardy)

Why oil prices are pushing higher

In Oil & Companies News 09/08/2016

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Crude rose this morning after some of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ poorer members renewed output freeze talks.
Brent crude, the global benchmark, rose 1.26 per cent to $44.83 per barrel this morning. Its US counterpart, West Texas Intermediate crude, swelled 1.32 per cent to $42.35.
“Opec members including Venezuela, Ecuador and Kuwait are said to be behind the latest reincarnation. But just like previous endeavors, it seems doomed to fail, given key Opec members (think: Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Iran) persist in their battle for market share, ramping up exports apace,” Matt Smith, director of commodity research at ClipperData, said in a note.
Attempts to coordinate an output freeze between some of the world’s biggest oil producers earlier this year helped crude recover from below $27 per barrel. But the talks were derailed by a disagreement between regional rivals Iran and Saudi Arabia.
Crude fell into a bear market recently after investor sentiment turned negative due to a glut of oil products which will clip refinery demand. Expectations for Libya to restart exports higher output from Opec and more US oil rigs also weighed.
A bear market is usually when an asset declines 20 per cent from its peak, within a two-month period.
Government data released last week showed US oil stocks unexpectedly rose again, however gasoline inventories plunged. This prompted money managers to raise their bets on oil prices falling to a new all-time record.
Barclays said today that the current oil price decline cycle could boost non-OECD demand, more so than in the first quarter. This would be driven by a weakening dollar, as well as lower refined product prices.

Source: City A.M.

Oil slips to $45 as glut overshadows hope for producer action

In Oil & Companies News 09/08/2016

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Oil fell below $45 a barrel on Tuesday after rallying to a two-week high the previous day, as concern about a supply glut outweighed hopes of producer action to prop up prices.
In the latest sign of ample supplies, market intelligence firm Genscape reported a rise of more than 307,000 barrels at the Cushing, Oklahoma delivery hub for U.S. crude, traders said. U.S. inventory reports are due on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Brent crude for October was down 35 cents at $45.04 a barrel by 0828 GMT, after rising $1.12 on Monday. The global benchmark fell nearly 15 percent in July. U.S. crude for September was down 24 cents at $42.78.
“One can only wonder how long this enthusiasm will last considering the oversupplied fundamental backdrop,” said Tamas Varga of oil broker PVM, referring to Monday’s rally.
OPEC comments helped fuel the gain on Monday. Its president Qatar, in a rare statement on the market outlook issued by the group’s Vienna headquarters, said the market was on the path to rebalancing and the drop in prices would be temporary.
OPEC sources have been saying since June that renewed talks about a global output freeze could take place in September, when most members, plus non-members such as Russia, are expected to attend an International Energy Forum meeting in Algeria.
The oil minister for cash-strapped Venezuela sought to keep alive the prospect of producer action to boost prices, saying on Monday a meeting between OPEC and non-OPEC countries may take place “in the coming weeks”.
But Russia said it does not see grounds for new talks with OPEC yet. Iran, which refused to join an initiative discussed earlier this year to freeze output levels, has not said whether it would cooperate with any new effort.
Later on Tuesday, the latest round of U.S. inventory reports will be in focus. Analysts in a Reuters poll forecast that U.S. crude stockpiles fell by 1 million barrels last week.
The American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, is due to release its inventory update at 2030 GMT, ahead of the government’s report on Wednesday.
Source: Reuters (By Alex Lawler; Additional reporting by Osamu Tsukimori in Tokyo; Editing by Dale Hudson)

Nigeria, others record 26% job cut in oil production

In Oil & Companies News 09/08/2016

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DATA obtained from the United States, US, Energy Information Administration, EIA, has put the continued decline of employment in the oil and natural gas production across the world at 26 percent between 2014 and 2016.
The report, which captured between October 2014 and May 2016, stated that employment in oil and gas production reached a hight of 538,000 jobs in October 2014, but since then had declined by 26 percent, a loss of more than 142,000 jobs.
It will be recalled that in Nigeria, there had been alarming rate of job cuts in the petroleum sector over the downturn in crude oil price at the International market and the attacks on oil facilities in the Niger Delta region. As a result, the operations and earnings of oil companies dropped sharply, as recent report by the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, puts the country’s daily crude production losses at 500,000 barrels per day, with production averaging 1.4 million barrels per day, mb/d as against the 1.9mb/d recorded earlier in July.
According to the EIA jobs data report, the total decrease in jobs is nearly three times the 51,000 jobs lost over a 13-month period during the 2008–09 recession. The report hinted that not all production jobs that are directly related to drilling, saying “the majority of the jobs are actually for extraction or support activities, which include the operations of drilled wells, exploration, excavation, well surveying, casing work, and construction.
This also includes the maintenance of already producing wells.” The report further explained that “the effects of the reduction in drilling and employment in the industry have been relatively modest, with production levels in May down by 6 percent and 1 percent respectively. This is relative to their level in May 2015. “Compared to October 2014, the peak month for employment in the sector, May 2016 crude oil production was two percent lower, while natural gas production was flat.”
However, the report noted that “divergence between trends in rig counts and employment on the one hand and oil and the trends of natural gas production on the other are attributable to increases in production per new well in key regions, driven in part by advances in siting and drilling technology. “For instance, new-well oil production per rig so far in 2016 has been more than twice its 2013 level in areas such as the Bakken, Eagle Ford, and Permian.
Growing offshore crude oil production in the Gulf of Mexico has also helped to offset declines in Lower 48 onshore production,” the report added.
Source: Vanguard

India’s oil exploration regime received thumbs up from industry, shows survey

In Oil & Companies News 09/08/2016

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India’s oil exploration regime has received overwhelming support from the industry, a high profile survey has shown.
Over 95% of Indian hydrocarbon industry leaders consider the recent policy changes in the sector to be pro-business and transparent, and over 80% rated the present investment conditions in India’s hydrocarbon market to be quite positive.
A survey done by EyeOn consultancy and PetroFed, 214 respondents from public and private sector across the hydrocarbon industry supply valuechain, put forward an optimistic view of the future of the Indian hydrocarbon sector, with 93.5% expecting significant to moderate growth over the next five years.
On the policy front, a third of the respondents preferred boosting private investments in the domestic exploration and production (E&P) sectors and increasing India’s E&P portfolio and investments abroad to reduce hydrocarbon import dependency by 10%,a target set by the Union oil minister a couple of months ago.
The Hydrocarbon Exploration Licensing Policy (HELP) has been highlighted in the survey, with about 65% respondents welcoming the shift from production/profit-sharing to revenue-sharing contracts and introduction of open acreage policy and more than 64% expecting a successful rounds of bidding for the discovered small fields.
77.3% of the survey sample recommended encouraging transition to a gas-based economy and increasing the use of biofuels, in the context of global concern for reducing CO2 emissions.
However, 63.6% sought development of relevant infrastructure as the key to accelerate gas usage and increase the share of gas in India’s energy mix.

Source: Indiatimes

Texas oil regulator expects $60/barrel crude by 2017

In Oil & Companies News 09/08/2016

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A Texas oil industry regulator expects crude oil prices to eclipse $60 per barrel by next year as global supply and demand balance, a price that would again make production profitable across the largest producing U.S. state.
Any rise in oil prices would be a welcome relief to Texas energy companies, especially those who operate in the Eagle Ford shale region, where production has slumped with prices slumped near $43 per barrel.

“Pretty much every single fundamental that we have points to those commodity prices going up, not down,” Ryan Sitton, one of three elected members of the Texas Railroad Commission, said in an interview on Monday.
“I fully expect to see $60 a barrel oil, and then some, next year,” said Sitton, who will be a keynote speaker at the NAPE conference in Houston later this week, a gathering of oil and gas investors.
In Texas alone, Sitton said, state regulators are processing less than a third of the oil and gas well permits they did just two years ago, highlighting the wariness companies have to drill and pump more.
The inaction mirrors North Dakota and other large oil producing parts of the United States, where production has slipped from recent highs.
Source: Reuters