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All Hat, Not Cattle

By
Elliott H. Gue
"Water, water every where, And all the boards did shrink;
Water, water every where, Nor a drop to drink."
-Samuel
Taylor Coleridge, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
Iran isn’t
an energy-independent country.
I’m
well aware that Iran produces more than 4 million barrels of
oil per day, the fourth-highest production in the
world. And with the near-constant reporting about Iranian crude
reserves during the past six months, I find it difficult to believe
that anyone could be unaware that Iran has 132 billion barrels
in proven reserves--or, at least, they claim to.
But what’s often ignored is that we don't consume crude
oil. You don't fill your car's tank with crude, nor is it used
to power jet aircrafts, cruise ships or railway locomotives.
Crude oil, in its natural state, often isn’t even that
flammable; one of the first uses of crude oil was as an alternative
to whale blubber in oil lamps.
The real global source of energy is refined products: gasoline
(petrol), diesel and jet fuel. Crude oil is nothing more than
a raw material--the feedstock used to produce these refined products.
Here's where Iran's energy equation doesn't add up. Last week,
the Iranian parliament set a date for the introduction of gasoline
rationing; it also announced a roughly 25 percent hike in gasoline
prices. That's because the country is literally running out of
gas.
The problem is twofold. First, as I've highlighted before, the
Iranian government has elected the self-destructive practice
of subsidizing petrol by pegging the price at 9 cents a liter
(34.6 cents per gallon) for the past three years, despite the
rapid rise in gasoline prices almost everywhere else around the
world.
As with any good, artificially low price, it leads to excess
demand and waste encouragement. Because gasoline is so cheap,
consumers will use more petrol and won't take steps to conserve.
Second is the far-more-obstinate problem of refining capacity.
Refiners literally convert raw crude oil into these usable refined
products such as gasoline. They're the key middlemen between
crude oil and actual, usable products. This crucial step in the
crude oil supply chain is often ignored by the financial media.
Assuming the refineries are working properly, the total throughput
of Iranian refineries is less than 1.5 million barrels of crude
oil per day. And that's a big assumption; as I've stressed before,
Iran has massively underinvested in the upkeep of its energy
infrastructure. If refinery accidents and shut-ins are relatively
common in countries like the US and the UK, you can imagine the
potential if a country isn't investing sufficient cash in maintenance.
At any rate, Iran's refining capacity is no better than 38 percent
of its oil production; the country can't even refine half the
oil it produces. Nor, for that matter, can Iran even refine close
to what it consumes.
The bottom line: Iran actually imports some 40 percent of the
oil consumed domestically. Somewhat akin to Coleridge's ancient
mariner, Iran is surrounded by crude oil but totally incapable
of using that oil domestically.
Importing all that petrol is expensive. Iran's parliament is
sensibly concerned with its domestic subsidy program and wants
to limit the annual subsidy to $2.5 billion. My guess: A 25 percent
price hike isn't going to fix that problem or curb Iran's dependence
on foreign refining capacity.
And this isn't a problem just for Iran. When you factor the
refining capacity into the global energy puzzle, the picture
changes dramatically. Take Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez,
for example.
As part of
Chavez's "Socialist Revolution," he's implicitly
and/or explicitly threatened to cut off US oil supplies; Venezuela
exports roughly 1.5 million barrels of oil per day to the US,
including both raw crude and oil products. That puts Venezuela
behind only Canada and Mexico as a source of petroleum for the
American market. In the context of the current tight global crude
market, this would seem to be a significant potential problem.
Chavez has, of course, followed up this rhetoric with stunts
like offering subsidized heating oil to poor in the US and even
getting Joe Kennedy to front that effort. He's also talked with
China and the left-leaning mayor of London about ways for Venezuela
to divert more of its oil to these countries and away from the
US.
But it's important to understand the myriad issues with Chavez's
plan. First, much of Venezuela's crude is heavy and/or sour crude.
To explain, every day in the newspaper and all over the Internet
we hear of crude trading at $60 or $58 per barrel as if it were
just one commodity with one price. Typically, the price we hear
about will be the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) futures
price, which is based on the price of light, sweet crude oil.
You'll also hear talk of Brent crude, a standard for oil sourced
from the North Sea of the UK and Norway. The name comes from
the Brent oilfield, located northeast of Scotland's Shetland
Islands.
But these are just common types of crude and certainly don't
represent the current trading price of every grade of crude on
Earth.
Oils are typically described based on two basic properties--specific
gravity and sulphur content. Without delving into too much detail,
specific gravity measures the density of a substance compared
to the density of pure water. According to the standard scientific
definition, the specific gravity of water is 1; if a substance
has a specific gravity less than 1, it's less dense than water
and will float.
To put this into context, 1 gallon (3.79 liters) of gasoline
typically weighs a little more than 6 pounds (2.73 kilograms).
In comparison, a gallon of fresh water weights closer to 8.3
pounds (3.77 kilograms); that means the specific gravity of gasoline
is roughly 0.72 (6.0 divided by 8.3). Gasoline is less dense
than water.
In the petroleum
business, however, the standard scientific measure of specific
gravity is altered by a standard formula
to yield API gravity. (API stands for American Petroleum Institute.)
API gravity moves opposite to standard specific gravity; in other
words, the higher the API gravity, the "lighter" or
less dense the crude oil.
Crude oils are graded by API gravity. For example, crude oils
with an API gravity of more than 31.1 degrees are considered
light crude oils. When you hear the term light, sweet crude on
the news, that's exactly what they're talking about.
Crude oils with an API gravity of less than 21.5 degrees are,
as you may have already guessed, called heavy crude oils. And
crudes with a grade between these two levels are typically termed
medium crude oils.
Brent crude
typically has an API gravity around 38 to 39, so it's considered
a light crude. The NYMEX crude oil futures contract
also calls for crude with "not less than 37 degrees API
gravity nor more than 42 degrees API gravity." Therefore,
this futures contract is also based on light crude oil.
This measure
isn’t meaningless from a refiner’s
standpoint. Specifically, light crude oils are simpler to refine
than heavy crude oils. That's because your typical barrel of
light crude oil will tend to yield a higher quantity of useful
products such as gasoline per-barrel refined.
Refining light crude into gasoline is a less-complex process
than refining heavy crude. Using some more-complex processes,
the gasoline yield of heavy crude oils can be increased tremendously.
But not all refineries can handle heavy crude economically. That
is why light crudes typically trade at a premium valuation to
heavy crudes.
The second key terms to understand are sweet and sour. These
terms have absolutely nothing to do with taste; rather, both
terms refer to the sulphur content of the crude oil. Sweet crudes
are relatively low in sulphur, while sour crudes have a higher
naturally occurring sulphur content.
The bottom line about all of this is that the most-commonly
quoted type of crude oil is light, sweet crude. This is also
one of the most-expensive, highest-quality types of crude oil
on the planet.
Standard Maya crude has an API gravity of 22 degrees and a sulphur
content of 3.3 percent; it's a heavy, sour crude. The current
price of Maya crude is about $45 per barrel, a whopping $11 discount
to West Texas Intermediate (WTI) and closer to $14 discount to
Brent. The chart below shows the difference in price between
WTI crude and Maya crude over the past several years.
Source: Bloomberg
Here's the problem for Venezuela: The country has no alternative
market to the US for much of its crude. One useful measure in
this regard is a refinery's complexity index. Refineries that
are able to run heavier, more-sour feedstocks are said to be
more complex than refineries that can only run light, sweet crude.
There are a few different ways to measure this, but one of the
simplest is to compare a refinery's conversion capacity to its
total throughput capacity. Without delving into too much detail,
suffice it to say that conversion capacity is what allows a refiner
to process heavy, sour crudes.
Venezuela has total refining capacity of about 1.28 million
barrels of crude oil per day. The country's total conversion
capacity is less than 40 percent of that amount; my crude measure
of complexity stands at 38 percent. Venezuela is woefully incapable
of refining even a small part of its crude domestically, so it
must export that oil to countries where it can be refined.
Of course, the Venezuelan government-owned oil company, doing
business as Citgo in the US, owns refineries abroad--mainly in
the US mainland and in the US Virgin Islands (St. Croix). Citgo
either owns outright or holds a large stake in another 1.1 million
barrels per day worth of refining capacity located in the US.
The complexity index for its US-based refineries stands at 83
percent. Obviously, these refineries were set up with the express
purpose of handling Venezuelan heavy crude oil imports into the
US market. And, as a whole, US refineries are among the most
complex in the world; it's a logical importer of Venezuela's
crude.
How about those other potential markets? China has total refining
capacity of about 6.25 million barrels per day. But the complexity
index for these refineries is only 15.5 percent; China can't
adequately refine heavy crudes, so the vast majority of Venezuelan
oil exports would be useless to China.
Chavez's
threats ring hollow when you consider these facts. Chavez needs
every ounce of oil revenue he can get to stay in
power. Without his oil-funded social programs and "21st
century" socialist spending, he'd likely be out of power
in a matter of weeks. The fact is he's just as dependent on the
US as the US is on Venezuela, perhaps even more so.
Elliott
H. Gue is editor of The Energy Letter (www.energystrategist.com).
Petroleumworld not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
Note: This article was first published by The
Energy Letter,
on March 30, 2007. Petroleumworld reprint this article
in the
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Petroleumworld
News 05/20/07
Copyright
© 2007 James J. Puplava Financial Sense.All rights
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