US to make Strategic Petroleum Reserve available to oil refineries
The Bush administration announced the other day that crude oil in the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserve, which
contains about 700 mm barrels, would be made available to oil refineries. That was in response to a decline of more
than 90 % of oil output in the Gulf of Mexico, which normally produces 1.5 mm bpd, or more than a quarter of the
nation's total crude-oil output.
That announcement, at least temporarily, seemed to stabilize the price of oil on the New York Mercantile Exchange
(NYMEX), keeping it below $ 70 per barrel. But it has done little to affect NYMEX's closing wholesale price of
gasoline, which has increased by more than one third since Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast region.
Closing at $ 2.65 per gallon, the September wholesale gasoline contract price, which excludes taxes and dealer
profits, amounted to $ 111.30 per barrel, reflecting a "refinery premium" of more than $ 40 per barrel compared to
the $ 70 cost of crude oil. (Each barrel contains 42 gallons.) October contracts increased more than 7 %.
The fact that gasoline prices have soared while crude oil prices have stabilized strongly suggests that today's
bottleneck in the evolving energy crisis has less to do with the total supply of crude oil and much more to do with
current refining capacity.
The petroleum reserve could be emptied; but if refinery capacity is not available to process the crude into gasoline,
diesel, jet fuel, heating oil and other petroleum products, then the extra crude emptied onto the market will have
little impact on the ultimate price of gasoline and other fuels.
With nine Gulf Coast refineries closed because of Katrina, there is a massive shortage of refinery capacity. Those
nine refineries represent 12 % of US refining capacity, or about 2 mm barrels of oil per day. Several factors have
contributed to the refinery shutdowns, including massive flooding, the loss of power and the evacuation of thousands
of skilled technicians needed to operate these particularly pernicketyplants. Katrina also inflicted substantial
damage on major pipelines bringing crude to operating refineries and finished products to market.
US refineries have become increasingly temperamental because they have been around for a very long time. In fact, we
haven't built a new refinery in more than 25 years. Yes, existing refineries have undergone significant expansion
over the years as others have been shuttered, but many of them are more than 30 years old.
Already operating near total capacity before Katrina, the aging refinery infrastructure left little margin for error.
Katrina, needless to say, obliterated that margin and then much more. Now we are paying the price, which,
appropriately enough, has reflected itself in soaring gasoline prices around the nation.
Beyond more frequent breakdowns and fires, America's pre-Katrina refinery problem was further apparent from the
rising level of refined petroleum products that have been imported in recent years. Since 1995, imported petroleum
products have nearly doubled, rising from 1.6 mm bpd to more than 3.1 mm for the first half of 2005.
Unlike America's strategic reserve, which holds only crude oil, European reserves include tens of millions of barrels
of gasoline. Germany, France, Italy and Spain control most of the 52 mm barrels of gasoline reserves available
throughout the world. Tankers reportedly have been booked to deliver an estimated 3 mm barrels of gasoline from
European stockpiles.
However, implying that America's gasoline shortage was partly its own fault, Wolfgang Clement, the economics minister
of Germany, signalled that releasing sufficient reserves to significantly mitigate the US crisis at a time when
European gas prices were at record levels might be problematic.
"I must say the United States has had insufficient refining capacity for a long time," Mr Clement said, "and this is
presumably now impaired, so the situation is coming to a head."
Considering the magnanimity of America's Marshall Plan when Germans were in desperate need, one could be easily
tempted to lash out at the lecturing from an ungrateful Mr Clement. But that isn't going to solve our long-term
problem of refinery shortages.
As long as America continues to consume 25 % of the world's oil, the least we can do is become self-sufficient in
refining it.
