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Sep 23, 2022
By Eleanor Budds and Kurt Barrow
Global refined oil product markets are on track to remain tight until mid-decade, with the global downstream industry facing significant near-, medium- and long-term challenges, according to a new report by S&P Global and the International Energy Forum (IEF).
Global oil refining capacity dropped for the first time in 20 years in 2020 and again last year, on pandemic-weakened margins, accelerated refinery closures, and motivated conversions to biofuels or distribution terminals, according to an Oil Refining Industry Insights report issued last week.
S&P Global Commodity Insights forecasts that there are no quick fixes for the forces at play in creating a tight market for refined oil products now and into the future. The causes for the current market conditions are include headwinds from the unprecedented restructuring following record refinery closures in 2020-2021, to sanctions on one of the world's largest fossil fuel exporters, to China's strategic shift to reduce petroleum product exports. All of which comes even as owners are facing an uncertain future for refining demand as the world transitions to lower-carbon energy sources.
By the numbers
Further, prompted by renewable fuel policies, some refineries, particularly in the US and Europe, are opting to become biofuel producers (using hydrotreater units to produce renewable diesel and other means) rather than completely shutting down. Importantly, the volumetric output of a converted refinery is typically much lower compared with when the facility processed crude oil into transportation fuels. Based on announced projects that are considered as "firm", conversions will accelerate from 2023-24. Conversion capacity will nearly triple by 2025, expanding to 147 kb/d in 2025 from 50 kb/d in 2022.
Capital Expenditures
Downstream capital expenditures will need to reach $190 billion through 2030 for upgrades to refining capacity, petrochemical feedstock buildouts and sustaining existing assets to become reality, according to the report. It forecasts only 2.3 mb/d of net global refinery crude distillation unit (CDU) capacity will come online between 2022-2027.
The Russia/Ukraine Impact
Russia's invasion of Ukraine is spurring an unprecedented reshuffling of global refined product trade and more obstacles are on the horizon. Meanwhile, rerouting traditional flows of Russia's petroleum product exports is more complicated than for crude oil, according to the report.
Further, an EU embargo on importing Russian crude via pipeline comes into effect on December 5, 2022, and a ban on importing refined products of Russian origin beginning February 5, 2023. There are several exemptions to the embargo, but it will broadly cut 90% of Russian crude imports and nearly all product imports.
EV penetration accelerating and offsetting 4 mb/d of demand by 2030
Passenger EV sales are expected to rise sharply in the upcoming years as policy support continues, the cost of lithium-ion batteries decline, and more EV models come to showroom floors.
Refining's Rocky Road
While the refining industry is headed toward a less carbon-intensive future, it will be a rocky, uneven road, due in large part to an evolving and fractured decarbonization policy landscape. That said, the downstream industry is innovative and resilient and there is little doubt that successful companies will emerge leaner, more efficient, and better adapted to the evolving market and fuels of the future.
To download a free copy of the full report, use the call out on the right side of this page.
Posted 23 September 2022 by Eleanor Budds, Director, Oil Markets, Midstream and Downstream, S&P Global Commodity Insights and
Kurt Barrow, Vice President, Oil Markets, Midstream, and Downstream, S&P Global Commodity Insights
This article was published by S&P Global Commodity Insights and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.