Drop
in European oil products demand menaces refineries: CONCAWE
Up
to 40 small refineries in Europe could close over the next two
decades, if they cannot tap growing export markets, because demand
for oil products in the region is expected to drop, a study by
industry association CONCAWE shows.
26
September, 2012
A
total of 166 million metric tonnes (182.98 tons) will be lost from
fossil fuel demand between 2005 and 2030, according to the study
presented by Michael Lane, secretary general of CONCAWE, at the
Platts European Refining Markets Conference in Brussels on Tuesday.
CONCAWE
is the oil companies' European association for environment, health
and safety in refining and distribution. Its members represent nearly
100 percent of European refining capacity.
"What
is quite shocking is that this 166 million tonnes of demand decline
is equivalent to the combined capacity of the nine biggest refineries
in Europe or the 40 smallest, almost half of the 90 currently active
EU mainstream refineries," Lane said, whilst noting that export
demand could help offset this.
The
study shows some 32 million tonnes being stripped from heating oil
demand, 39 million tonnes from inland heavy fuel oil demand due to
substitution by natural gas and improved boiler efficiency, and 43
million tonnes from road fuel demand.
LEGISLATIVE
PRESSURES
Lane
cited legislative pressures to reduce carbon emissions from passenger
vehicles in the European Union, which will lead to some substitution
of fossil fuels by renewables, as well as improved vehicle
efficiency.
Total
road demand for diesel and gasoline is expected to shrink by 81
million tonnes between 2005 and 2030, mainly due to a steep decline
in demand for gasoline.
Middle
distillates will therefore make up a greater percentage of the demand
mix, accounting for 61 percent by 2030, up from 46 percent in 2000.
"It
will be increasingly difficult for gasoline-oriented EU refineries to
meet this changing demand ratio," Lane said.
Instead,
refinery operating rates are expected to decline in line with demand
trends, with utilization rates of crude distillation units (CDUs) -
the central unit in a refinery - seen slumping to 74.5 percent by
2030 from 85.8 percent in 2008, the study showed.
The
average EU refinery utilization rate is seen by the CONCAWE study
falling to 82 percent in 2015, from 86 percent in 2008, in spite of
the closure of 5 percent of refining capacity between 2008 and 2015
that has already been announced.
However,
Europe will have to try to increase its production of diesel and jet
fuel to make up the growing shortfall as demand patterns shift. The
investment projects announced to date should boost European
distillates hydrocracker capacity by 28 percent, Lane said.
"But
the announced investments only address part of the total needs,"
he added, saying an estimated $51 billion in expansion would be
required between 2008 and 2020, compared with the $30 billion in
projects so far announced.
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