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Unless this situation is cleared quickly there will a be sharp increase in price of refined oil products and attempt to increase stockpiles in case of additional supply reductions from Russia
Presumably, if this and the Antwerp strike occur, it will take a few weeks for the effects to reach the US, because of the shipping delay. But, the calculations are clear: We need this level of imports to keep our inventory situation stable. These two episodes illustrate that a problem in one region can and will easily spread to other regions.
What if the world is really past peak and the U.S. will not be able to get the oil necessary when the refineries start to run at full speed again?
On this issue, the maximum capacity of US refineries is a little over 17.7 mbpd inputs. Currently we are running at about 15.1 mbpd inputs, so even at full production, that's about 2-2.5 mbpd additional crude oil demand, because we will probably not be able to get over 96% utilization right now.
If Saudi could not provide any more crude than it is right now, and neither could anybody else, we could still cover this for quite a while by drawing it out of inventory, at first out of the normal commercial inventory and then out of the SPR.
But, like keeping a bunch of gas cans in your garage, drawing from inventory can only be done once, after that, you have to take your chances with the market.
One of the reasons we started this thread two years ago is that we knew one of the first signs of a peak would be the consistent drawdown of inventory over an extended period, and if we could identify this condition when it happened, we might be able to sense when the peak is on us.
57% last week. pup is this possible and is it sustainable?
Yes to both. This is about where it normally runs. Back in the early 90's this number frequently got into the 62-65% range but the product mix has obviously changed gradually since then. It has been about 57% since right about the time Katrina hit. The all time maximum was 68% (December 98), but I doubt we will get that high any time soon with things set up like they now are.
Since 2001, on average, refinery utilization increased 0.46% per week during the month of may. If this year is true to form we should be looking at 92% overall utilization by the end of the month. So this is actually pretty consistent with the .1 mbpd model. This would put us at 9.153 mbpd (at 57% gasoline production) for unleaded by the end of the month. It remains to be seen how much higher we can or will go after that, however.