Energy

Refining under pressure

January 25, 2011

Global

January 25, 2011

Global
Our Editors

The Economist Intelligence Unit

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With just 11% of respondents identifying downstream as providing the strongest business growth over the next 12 months, our survey confirms the tough climate for refining margins. Refiners face a real challenge given the upward pressure on the price of crude and downward pressure on demand. Margins are weak and US refiners have lost money in five of the seven quarters up until the third quarter of 2010.

"Some people have joked that the 'Golden Age' of refining lasted about two weeks. It's a cyclical business and it's like a baker: you don't control the price of your wheat and you don't control the price of your bread," says John Felmy, chief economist at the American Petroleum Institute (API). "In gasoline, it looks like it is going to see pretty intense and prolonged pressure because you've got a lot of gasoline available on world markets that competes here in the US and you have soft demand. Diesel is a bit better, but for both you have continued changes in the cost of refining. We have a continued shift to cleaner fuels, lower sulphur fuels, and those are costs that are substantial."

Survey respondents appear somewhat more optimistic about margins over the next year, with 36% anticipating somewhat better downstream oil margins, compared with 15% who expect somewhat worse margins.

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