Gasoline
Supply Seen Down to 1990 Low on Sandy: Energy Markets
Gasoline
stockpiles on the U.S. East Coast may sink to the lowest level since
at least 1990 as Hurricane Sandy moves ashore, curtailing fuel
production and distribution, based on Energy Department data.
31
October, 2012
Refineries
accounting for 94 percent of regional processing capacity shut or
reduced rates before Sandy, the largest tropical storm on record in
the Atlantic, approached the East Coast yesterday. Colonial Pipeline
Co., which operates the largest link between Gulf Coast refiners and
East Coast distributors, planned to shut its main line delivering
fuel to Philadelphia and New York Harbor late yesterday as customers
shuttered operations.
Prices
had jumped 5.9 percent in three days, breaking the longest losing
streak since 1986, as the storm headed directly for the heart of East
Coast fuel refining and distribution. Gasoline inventories in the
central Atlantic area are already 16 percent below a year earlier.
Sandy threatens to flood and disrupt power at refineries and
terminals that account for one- third of U.S. finished gasoline
production, according to BNP Paribas SA.
“Given
that the hurricane is passing over the refining and terminal system
and not just near them, it’s clear that supply concerns will
outweigh concerns about reduced demand as people stay home,” Harry
Tchilinguirian, BNP Paribas SA’s head of commodity markets strategy
in London, said in an interview yesterday. “You’re going to have
a run-up in prices that could be kept up.”
Gasoline
Futures
Gasoline
for November delivery fell 1.3 percent to $2.7221 a gallon at 1:48
a.m. in electronic trading today after rising 5.77 cents yesterday to
settle at $2.7568 a gallon on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the
third day of gains.
After
surging 23 percent in the third quarter, gasoline has been the
biggest loser in the Standard & Poor’s GSCI index of 24
materials this month. Prices have slid 19 percent so far this month
as refineries restarted units after repairs and demand sank to the
lowest level since March 16 in the week ended Oct. 19, according to
Energy Department data.
Inventories
in the central Atlantic, which includes Philadelphia and New York,
were 22.9 million barrels as of Oct. 19, up from 20.4 million Sept.
28.
Supplies
dropped 1.9 million barrels from Aug. 19, 2011, to Sept. 2 that year
when Hurricane Irene swept along the East Coast. A similar decline
would reduce supplies that at the end of September were at the lowest
level since the Energy Department began publishing weekly figures in
November 1990.
Refineries
Shutting
The
refineries shutting production ahead of the storm account for 1.22
barrels of the area’s 1.29 million-barrel-a-day capacity. In New
Jersey, Phillips 66 shut its 238,000-barrel-a- day Bayway plant and
Hess Corp. (HES) shut its 70,000-barrel-a-day refinery in Port
Reading.
Philadelphia
Energy Solutions said many of the process units at its 355,000-barrel
Philadelphia refinery were shut. PBF Energy Inc. reduced rates at its
185,000-barrel Paulsboro, New Jersey, and 182,200-barrel Delaware
City, Delaware, plants. The Energy Department reported that the
185,000-barrel-a-day Trainer refinery in Pennsylvania, run by Delta
Air Lines Inc.’s Monroe Energy LLC subsidiary, is operating at
reduced rates.
Colonial
began shutting delivery lines along the East Coast as customers in
Virginia, Maryland, New Jersey and New York halted operations. Line
3, an 825,000-barrel-a-day fuel pipeline running from Greensboro,
North Carolina, to Philadelphia and Linden, was expected shut as of 7
p.m., Steve Baker, a company spokesman, said in an e-mail. Buckeye
Partners LP (BPL) said its pipelines delivering fuel from Linden were
shutting as of 4 p.m.
East
Coast Blending
The
East Coast received 1.42 million barrels a day of finished gasoline
and fuel to be blended with ethanol at terminals in July, Energy
Department data show. Imports to the region were 471,000 barrels a
day in the week ended Oct. 19, department data show.
The
storm threatens to reverse an increase in East Coast capacity over
the past year as refiners processed less expensive oil from Texas and
North Dakota shale formations instead of pricier imports. U.S. oil
production reached 6.61 million barrels a day in the seven days ended
Oct. 19, the most since 1995, department data show.
North
Dakota Bakken crude sank $6.50 a barrel to a $10 discount to
benchmark West Texas Intermediate yesterday, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg as refiners shut production.
Shutting
Terminals
Hess,
Nustar Energy LP (NS), Phillips 66 (PSX), Citgo Petroleum Corp. and
Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP (KMP) said they closed fuel
terminals. The East Coast is a major blender of gasoline and much of
that blending occurs at terminals. New York, New Jersey and Delaware
Bay ports were closed to vessel traffic by the U.S. Coast Guard,
halting tankers that deliver gasoline to suppliers and also help
supply the region’s refineries with crude oil.
“If
there’s damage to these terminals and ports, if the ability to get
product is compromised, that will be the real challenge,” said
Sander Cohan, a global transportation fuels analyst and principal
with Energy Security Analysis Inc. in Wakefield, Massachusetts. “You
will see the largest demand region in the U.S. deprived of fuel.”
If
the outages are short-lived, the market may focus its attention from
supply to demand if the hurricane disrupts people’s ability to
drive.
Dropping
Demand
“The
market is overlooking that we’re going to lose about 2 million
barrels of demand,” said Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil
Associates LLC in Houston. “Prices could rapidly fall if those
still operating ride out the storm unscathed and return to normal
operations on Wednesday and the market recognizes a significant
amount of demand.”
The
average nationwide price for regular gasoline at the pump declined
0.9 cent to $3.534 a gallon yesterday, AAA, the largest U.S. motoring
organization, said on its website. That’s the lowest level since
Aug. 1. Prices have fallen, or were unchanged, every day since Oct.
7, losing 7.4 percent. The pump price reached a 2012 high of $3.936
on April 4.
AAA
expects that disruption to supply will be short-lived and that the
bigger threat is to demand so it has not changed its projection that
the national average will fall as low as $3.40 a gallon by election
day, Avery Ash, a spokesman for AAA in Washington, said in an
interview.
“You’ve
got a slow-moving storm that is going to keep motorists off the road
for a number of days in a very, very wide region,” said Ash. “We
may see a short-term regional bump in prices but, once the storms
move through, the national average will continue on its downward
trend the rest of the year.”
Inventory
Report
U.S.
gasoline inventories probably fell by 600,000 barrels in the week
ended Oct. 26 on a nationwide basis, according to the median estimate
of eight analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.
The
Energy Department’s weekly inventory report, which is normally
published at 10:30 a.m. Washington time each Wednesday, will be
postponed until at least Nov. 1 because of Sandy, Jon Cogan, a
spokesman for the Energy Information Administration said in an e-mail
today. Crude inventories are projected to have risen 1.475 million
barrels, according to the analyst survey.
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