For refining, more volatility is on its way
Margins will remain healthy in northern Europe and the US Gulf Coast until September. But a slide is coming
The collapsing oil price has been brutal for operators in the upstream, but refiners have been making hay. Brent’s slump was especially good for European product producers in 2015, when margins recovered strongly after years of weakness. Last August, European Brent crack spreads reached a three-year high of over $10 a barrel, their highest level since margins of more than $12.31/b were reached in September 2012. Behind last summer’s surge was the ever-cheapening price of Brent crude and a stellar showing from American drivers, who sent US gasoline demand sharply higher. This propelled European refiners – the main foreign supplier of gasoline to the US – to maximise production of the road fue
Also in this section
25 November 2024
The Nigerian mega-refinery has yet to reach its full product-producing potential
22 November 2024
The Energy Transition Advancement Index highlights how the Kingdom can ease its oil dependency and catch up with peers Norway and UAE
21 November 2024
E&P company is charting its own course through the transition, with a highly focused natural gas portfolio, early action on its own emissions and the development of a major carbon storage project
21 November 2024
Maintaining a competitive edge means the transformation must maximise oil resources as well as make strategic moves with critical minerals