Page added on July 25, 2018
Oil prices could spike as high as $200 per barrel over the next 18 months, which would cause an “economic crash of horrible proportions,” according to a new report.
A research paper from economist and oil market watcher Philip K. Verleger predicts there could be a shortage of low-sulfur diesel fuel in 2020 as a result of regulations from the International Maritime Organization (IMO) aimed at cutting sulfur emissions. The regulations, due to take effect at the start of 2020, lowers the allowed concentration of sulfur in maritime fuels from 3.5 percent to just 0.5 percent.
Those rules have already sparked a scramble for low-sulfur options. But the current global refining capacity may not be able to churn out enough low-sulfur fuels to allow a smooth transition from high-sulfur fuels by the world’s shipping fleet.
The shipping industry accounts for about 5 percent of total global oil demand, and most ships burn heavy fuel oil that is high in sulfur. Switching over 5 percent of total demand to low-sulfur diesel and gasoil – a distillate similar to diesel – is a massive shift.
Ship-owners will have a few options: install expensive scrubbers to remove sulfur, switch to low-sulfur fuels such as diesel or gasoil, or switch over to LNG. Scrubbers and LNG are generally thought to be the most expensive options, requiring capital outlays to overhaul entire fleets.
That will put the onus on low-sulfur fuels. But the problem is that not all crude oil is the same – heavier and sour varieties hold more sulfur and are unable to produce lower sulfur diesel without extra processing. And not all refineries are equipped to handle that processing.
Up until now, the maritime industry has been burning the residual fuel oil left over after the refining process. Fuel oil is the bottom of the barrel – it’s the cheapest, most viscous and dirtiest part of the barrel.
By 2020, diesel production will need to rise by at least seven percent, according to Philip K. Verleger, on top of the three percent increase needed for road transport and other uses. All of it will need to be low-sulfur. “It is not clear that the greater volumes can be produced,” Verleger wrote in his paper. “Instead…very large price hikes may be required to suppress non-maritime use.”
On top of that, the banishment of fuel oil from the maritime sector will lead to a crash in high-sulfur fuel oil prices. Power plants onshore that burn oil might switch over to high-sulfur fuels because of the steep crash in prices. “Ironically, the maritime fuel switch may do nothing to improve the global commons given that the pollution sources can just be moved from the high seas to land,” Verleger concludes.
But the big problem will be the shortage of diesel and gasoil because “as many as half of world refineries cannot produce fuel that meets the new regulation.”
He predicts a rerun of the historic price spike in 2007-2008, which was in part the result of a shortage of low-sulfur oils. Refiners found themselves in a bidding war for low-sulfur oil, pushing oil prices to well over $100 per barrel. “This situation will reoccur in 2020,” Verleger wrote, except that the price spike could be even more dramatic because “the fuel shift is greater and the refining industry is less prepared.”
Verleger does not mince words.
As the rules take effect in 2020, oil prices will spike to $160 per barrel or higher. “Economic activity will slow and, in some places, grind to a halt. Food costs will climb as farmers, unable to pay for fuel, reduce plantings. Deliveries of goods and materials to factories and stores will slow or stop,” he argues. “Vehicle sales will plummet, especially those of gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles (SUVs). One or more major U.S. automakers will face bankruptcy, even closure. Housing foreclosures will surge in the United States, Europe, and other parts of the world. Millions will join the ranks of the unemployed as they did in 2008.”
However, a report from Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy from earlier this year disputes this conclusion. Shippers switching over to low-sulfur fuels puts “the burden of innovation onto the refining industry,” the report says, “but it will likely prove a lesser challenge for refiners than is commonly understood.” That is because the fuels will be “fuel hybrids, the production of which will entail as much blending as actual refining.” Ultimately, the report concludes, “speculation about a product supply crunch underestimates the industry’s flexibility,” and ignores the potential for a reconfiguration of demand and the emergence of new types of blended fuel hybrids.
There is quite a lot of space between those two conclusions. We have 18 months before we find out which is more accurate.
14 Comments on "The Regulation That Could Push Oil To $200"
"Lucifer" on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 7:08 am
Like everything else in this world you lot will have to wait and see, but one thing is for sure the collapse is coming, don’t blame me if you don’t survive because i have given you all enough warning.
jj on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 7:20 am
How can i blame you if I’m dead?
joe on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 7:53 am
With a good mix of electric and hybrid cars $200 oils impact will be reduced.
Sissyfuss on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 10:40 am
Another pin prick to the globalization bubble.
BobInget on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 1:11 pm
LNG switching may be the most expensive option,
short term, but NG/wind are the future transportation fuels. Why? Cause, along with sail, it’s the ONLY remaining option.
http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/09/spinning-metal-sails-could-slash-fuel-consumption-emissions-cargo-ships
Cloggie on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 3:15 pm
German news now: the construction of Nordstream has begun. By the end of 2019 relatively cheap Siberian gas will begin to flow to Europe, Trump or no Trump. He can begin his attack/sanctians against Iran and halt all oil flow from the Gulf to Europe.
https://youtu.be/KSvfVL4XgiU
We are no longer an Anglo colony. Time for the 500m competent Europeans to engage in a massive armaments programs, including expansion of the French nuclear strike force. Russia is the future, the US is descending into third world status, although we should claim authority over those European-Americans who value their European roots.
In unrelated news, the European Space Agency has discovered large amounts of water on Mars, greatly enhancing chances of life on the red planet.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-5990367/Scientists-discover-12-mile-lake-hidden-Mars-fuelling-possibility-life-planet.html
Outcast_Searcher on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 3:26 pm
Lucifer: And how many decades have you been wrong? And how many decades have you been short the global stock markets?
Try being right for a few years, even as far as the TRENDS, and then be sure and get back to us to discuss how prescient you are. LOL
Cloggie on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 3:50 pm
Juncker travels to Washington and staves off EU-US trade war:
https://edition.cnn.com/politics/live-news/trump-today-07-25-18/index.html
Europe will import more from the US, soja beans and, yes, shale gas. One wonders where the net energy import country US will get extra fossil fuel from. Iran perchance?
MASTERMIND on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 3:56 pm
Clogg
Nobody besides you gives a shit about politics..Are issues are way beyond fixing at the ballot box..its all just a distraction before we start to run out of oil and collapse..You are wasting your precious time..
Cloggie on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 4:17 pm
Nobody besides you gives a shit about politics
Do I hear a Llama shitting??
With immense pride I can present the list of most sought after criminals by the Dutch police. And yessssss, there is a Hollander on the list!!!
Exactly one.
Well done, Tommy van der Sommen!
https://www.politie.nl/gezocht-en-vermist/nationale-opsporingslijst?page=1
It feels as if a Dutch person has made it into the 100-m finale:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qhPyViDCRbg
JuanP on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 4:51 pm
“Netherlands drought record soon to be broken”
https://nltimes.nl/2018/07/23/netherlands-drought-record-soon-broken
It seems that no place in the world is being spared. Uruguay experienced a few record breaking drought in the last decade. When I think of countries like Netherlands and Uruguay water is one of my main associations. In the Netherlands for obvious reasons and in Uruguay because the lcountry is saturated with creeks, springs, streams, ponds, lakes, wells, fountains, and rivers, and almost everywhere in the country there is water within sight and easy reach except in some urban areas. But droughts are increasing in frequency, intensity, and duration almost everywhere in the world.
MASTERMIND on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 4:56 pm
Top U.S. Shale Oil Fields Decline Rate Reaches New Record…. Half Million Barrels Per Day
If we add up these top five shale oil fields monthly decline rate for August will be 503,000 bpd. Thus, the shale oil companies must produce at least 503,000 bpd of new oil supply next month just to keep production from falling. And, we must remember, this decline rate will continue to increase as shale oil production rises.
https://srsroccoreport.com/top-u-s-shale-oil-fields-decline-rate-reaches-new-record-half-million-barrels-per-day/
Cloggie on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 5:02 pm
OT – launch Dutch student missile immanent in Spain, aiming at 44 km US record:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZP_qz_A13Vw
Cloggie on Wed, 25th Jul 2018 11:29 pm
Ouch, failure
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiK2crAM9c4