Page added on September 21, 2012
Saudi Arabia burned record
monthly volumes of oil in June and July, official government
figures show, contrary to the top crude producer’s plan to
temper its summer oil burning spree this year with more gas.
The world’s leading oil exporter burned an average of
743,500 barrels per day (bpd) of crude in June and July, up
82,000 bpd from the same months last year, mainly to make
electricity to keep the population cool, data issued under the
Joint Oil Data Initiative (JODI) showed on Wednesday.
The kingdom had hoped that more supply from Saudi gas fields
being made available for power generation would save millions of
barrels of valuable crude for export this summer.
In June it burnt an average of 778,000 bpd, 162,000 bpd more
than in June 2011.
Although there was a sharp fall from June to 709,000 bpd in
July, that still meant 3,000 barrels a day more went up in smoke
this July than in 2011 and much more than in any previous year.
Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said in March it was a shame
to burn crude for power plants and that Saudi Aramco would boost
gas supplies for power plants this summer, with an extra 90,000
barrels of oil equivalent possibly available.
But one source familiar with the situation said that gas
availability turned out lower than hoped, forcing Aramco to find
alternative fuels to meet the summer surge in power demand as
temperatures in the kingdom surged to 45 degrees Celsius.
Some of that demand was met with fuel oil, but there was not
enough available, forcing Saudi Arabia, which sits on the
world’s largest oil reserves, to burn around 5 million more
barrels of its biggest export earner over the two months than it
did last year.
A source close to Saudi Aramco said nearly a million barrels
were burnt on the highest demand days.
Saudi Arabia is by far the largest user of crude oil for
power generation, with most countries outside the Middle East
cutting back oil-fired power generation long ago in favour of
gas, nuclear and renewable energy sources.
The country’s consumption of oil for power rose by an
implied 260 percent from 2004 to 2010, official figures show.
With crude output from Saudi oilfields constrained by OPEC
production limits, Saudi Aramco is searching for gas that can be
pumped independently to supply rapidly rising demand for
electricity.
Aramco now manages known gas reserves of 279 trillion cubic
feet, the fourth largest in the world, and hopes to increase its
gross gas production from 10.2 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd)
in 2010 to more than 15 bcfd by 2015.
It has raised output significantly over the past few years
but has not been able to keep up with rapidly rising demand,
driven by population growth and a boom in petrochemicals and
other industries which get priority access to any natural gas
available.
2 Comments on "Saudi crude burn hits new records in June, July"
Arthur on Fri, 21st Sep 2012 1:14 pm
Surprise, surprise, SA is giving preference to it’s own people when it comes to the question of who is going to consume the oil of SA, the Saudi’s or the rest of the world.
I do not foresee a great future for global aviation, but I do foresee that Gulf States will be the last ones to operate large airline companies, as they will more and more monopolize the last remaining oil reserves and thus outcompete foreign airlines that have to operate with high fuel costs.
Kenz300 on Fri, 21st Sep 2012 5:59 pm
Time to start putting up those solar panels in the desert.