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Refining margins, i.e., refined product revenues less raw material expense and product purchases divided by refined product sales volume, for motor gasoline fell between 1990 and 1995, as did refining margins for a composite (weighted) average of petroleum products. Low returns during the first half of the 1990s have diminished expectations for a competitive return, thus eliminating from active consideration many potential investments in refineries. With fewer investment alternatives under consideration, relatively less investment occurred. However, declining product prices and falling margins have increased the pressure to reduce operating costs and to spread fixed costs over more output. Such incentives have shaped refinery investment thus far in the 1990s.
Additionally, these persistently low profits have prompted serious efforts by domestic refiners to realize greater value from their fixed assets and to reduce their operating costs in recent years. Refining operations have been consolidated, the capacity of existing facilities has been expanded, and several refineries have closed.
In addition, downstream joint ventures have been undertaken in the United States. For example, Ultramar and Diamond Shamrock, two independent U.S. refiners operating in different regions of the country, recently merged, creating a substantial downstream company. In late 1996, Texaco, Star Enterprise (a joint venture between Texaco and Aramco, the Saudi Arabian state-oil company), and Shell Oil (the U.S. subsidiary of Royal Dutch/Shell) have been negotiating an alliance to merge their U.S. refining and marketing operations. The resulting venture will have assets worth approximately $10 billion and will have roughly 80 percent greater refining capacity than Chevron, currently the second-largest domestic refiner.
Capacity has expanded through conventional projects (e.g., adding a catalytic cracking unit) and through debottlenecking investments, which are marginal investments that effectively create additional refining capacity from the same physical structure. The additional capacity is termed "capacity creep." In fact, operating capacity has "creeped" so substantially that distillation of domestic crude oil expanded more than 63,000 barrels per day between 1988 and 1995, the result of a combination of conventional and debottlenecking investments (Table 4-2). Those years also saw capacity per operating refinery increase by 19 percent to 91,400 barrels per day. However, over the same period, 33 domestic refineries with capacities totalling more than 800,000 barrels per day closed their doors.
The Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 introduced reformulated gasoline (RFG) in almost one-third of domestic gasoline markets. The requirement had unexpected consequences for refiners producing RFG. Several areas of states that had voluntarily agreed to participate in the RFG program in Phase I, unexpectedly withdrew, leaving excess amounts of RFG and depressed prices. In order to reduce similar risks to refiners during Phase II, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed rules that would make it more difficult to abruptly leave the program. These rules require areas now voluntarily using Phase I RFG to notify the EPA by December 1997 should they wish to leave the program on January 1, 2000, when Phase II begins. Any areas voluntarily staying in the program for Phase II would have to remain at least until December 2003.
The shares of petroleum products that different sectors of the domestic economy consume are changing gradually over time as electric utilities and, to a lesser extent, residential and commercial users continue reducing their consumption of petroleum products (Table 4-5). Conversely, the industrial and transportation sectors are slowly consuming greater shares of petroleum products, and both sectors are expected to increase their consumption of petroleum products during 1997. The overall importance (estimated by the share of total domestic energy they comprise) of petroleum products to the domestic economy has changed little during the 1990s and is expected to be largely unchanged during 1997 (Table 4-6).
The U.S. economy is expected to expand at about 2 percent annually through 2002. As a consequence, consumption of petroleum products will also expand slowly through 2002, averaging less than 2 percent growth annually. Motor gasoline's share of petroleum product consumption falls from 45 to 43 percent despite increasing approximately 2 percent annually over the period. Jet fuel increases about 4 percent annually between 1995 and 2002. Both distillate and residual fuel oil are each expected to increase by about 2 percent between 1995 and 2002. U.S. refined product output will probably expand more slowly than consumption between 1995 and 2002 (Table 4-3), whereas, by 2002, net imports of petroleum product are expected to nearly double.
Compliance with environmental regulations will most likely continue to be a major cost to domestic refiners. The most substantial legislation between 1995 and 2000 affecting domestic refiners is Phase II of the Clean Air Act Amendments. Phase II will require further refinery upgrades and investments for refiners to produce compliant RFG.
Demand for petroleum product is anticipated to increase by 11 million barrels per day, or by 16 percent, between 1995 and 2002. The bulk of that growth is expected to occur in the economically developing countries, most notably Southeast Asia and the Pacific Rim countries. China's petroleum consumption is expected to increase 46 percent between 1995 and 2002, with the economies of other nonindustrialized countries of Asia and the Pacific Rim expected to increase their petroleum consumption by 44 percent. (See Figure 4-4).
Prospects of foreign investment for U.S. refining and marketing companies between 1995 and 2002 appear to be greatest in non-OECD Asia, which is forecast to have the largest growth in petroleum consumption during that period. The Middle East and Asia should lead the world in growth of refining capacity well into the next century.
Neal C. Davis, Energy Information Administration (202) 586-6581, December 1996.
This chapter was prepared by the Energy Information Administration (EIA), the independent statistical and analytical agency of the Department of Energy. The information herein should not be construed as advocating or reflecting any policy position of the Department of Energy or any other organization.
Energy Information Administration, Performance Profiles of Major Energy Producers 1995, DOE/EIA-0206(95) (Washington, DC, February 1997) is available in PDF-format. A more recent edition also is available.
Energy Information Administration, International Energy Outlook 1996, DOE/EIA-0484(96)(Washington, D.C., May 1996). A more recent version also is available.
Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Review 1995, DOE/EIA-0384(95) (Washington, D.C., July 1996). A more recent version of the Annual Energy Review also is available.
Energy Information Administration, Petroleum Supply Annual, Volume 1, DOE/EIA-0384(95)/1 (Washington, D.C., February 1997). See also the Refinery Capacity Report, which was formerly part of volume 1 of the Petroleum Supply Annual.
Energy Information Administration, Privatization and the Globalization of Energy Markets, DOE/EIA-0609 (Washington, DC, October 1996).
"U.S. Refining Sector is Said to Show Signs of Real Recovery," Platt's Oilgram News (April 10, 1996), p. 2.
"U.S.
Refiners Find Benefits in Jvs with Foreign Partners," Oil and Gas Journal (July 22, 1997),
p. 16.
Chapter 2, Coal Mining
Chapter 3, Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas
Text last modified: November 12, 1997
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