Monday, October 13, 2008

Money & Business

Beyond the Barrel

Refineries Stagger Into Spring

March 03, 2008 04:34 PM ET | Marianne Lavelle | Permanent Link | Print

Now that the crocuses are out in Washington, D.C., it's time to look for signs of a spring run-up in gasoline prices. The AAA motor club now has the average price of gasoline at about $3.17 per gallon, up from $2.97 per gallon a month ago, but the next few weeks—when prices typically pick up along with driving demand—could be crucial.

One statistic that does not bode well for motorists is that over the past eight weeks, the nation's oil refineries have been working less efficiently than they have, on average, over any of the past 10 years. I averaged the weekly figures that the U.S. Energy Information Administration compiles on refinery capacity use rates:

1997: 95.1 percent
1998: 95.3 percent
1999: 92.9 percent
2000: 92.3 percent
2001: 92.2 percent
2002: 89.9 percent
2003: 91.8 percent
2004: 92.3 percent
2005: 90.3 percent
2006: 89.4 percent
2007: 88.8 percent
2008 (first eight weeks): 85.9 percent

Note that the past eight weeks' average was less than even the average in 2005, when, in the wake of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the weekly refinery capacity utilization rate fell to its lowest point in the past decade, 69.8 percent.

The refining industry blames environmental regulations, in part, for reducing the efficiency of its operations—especially the rules, phased in beginning in 2006, that required a 97 percent reduction in the sulfur content of highway diesel fuel. To meet the ultralow-sulfur diesel rules, the refiners typically treat the fuel with hydrogen, and the "hydrotreating" complex within the refinery requires much more regular maintenance than the portions of the refinery that churn out gasoline.

The rules "have really taken the center of reliability away from our conversion units [catalytic crackers], which always were built to be very reliable, and have moved that center of reliability over to the units that remove sulfur," says Lynn Westfall, vice president and chief economist for Tesoro, the second-largest refiner in the West. "Those units were never really built to be that reliable because they were never historically that important to us. A 'cat' cracker, which is the main unit that makes gasoline, can go five years without major maintenance. But a desulfurization unit: 18 months or maybe 12 months."

The oil industry fought the ultralow-sulfur diesel regulations for many years, but they were approved at the end of the Clinton administration and finalized by the Bush administration because of the compelling health evidence. The Environmental Protection Agency has estimated the rules will prevent 20,000 premature deaths per year. The rules "are absolutely vital for protecting public health," says Frank O'Donnell, president of Clean Air Watch. Also, trucks, buses, and other vehicles with diesel engines have been switching over to modern pollution control equipment that will not work with the old high-sulfur fuel.

At the time the rules were being weighed in 2001, the Energy Information Administration noted there were new technologies on the horizon that remove sulfur from diesel more efficiently. Where are these technologies when we need them?

Tags: gas prices | oil

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Reader Comments

This Skews the Picture a Bit

Domestic oil refineries operate at much higher capacities than other manufacturing facilities. That is a fact. Also, what time frames are part of her average? If she's looking at the winter/spring, then that is when refineries typically take units offline to perform routine maintenance. By looking at the first 8 weeks of this year, she's not accounting for the facilities' routine maintenance schedule. Any by the way, gasoline inventories are at a 5-year high right now.

The last thing Congress should do is single out this industry for punitive taxes that really will hurt industry reinvestment (to the benefit of state-owned oil companies overseas in unsafe areas).

It's disingenuous to say that refineries are not operating as efficiently, and this story unfairly paints a bleak picture.

flawed analysis

As a graduate student I question her methodology. In her citation of the statistics, she puts (first 8 weeks) following the statistics for 2008 which means she is not comparing the same statistics. This is flawed methodology which should have never been approved by her editor. You cannot compare apples and oranges to make a story seem more tantalizing. The analytic reasoning behind her story is inaccurate at best and deceitful at worst.

First eight weeks comparison

Since I wouldn't want any graduate students or anyone else to think I was being deceitful (!) here is another look at the data, this time just the average of the first eight weeks of the year to compare season to season.

First eight weeks of:

1997 90.1

1998 93.2

1999 93.1

2000 85.9

2001 90.6

2002 87.2

2003 86.7

2004 89.6

2005 91.2

2006 86.7

2007 87.4

2008 85.9

These January and February averages are lower than the previous figures, which were indeed entire-year averages, but the only year that the capacity rate has dipped as low as jan-feb 2008 was in 2000.

William makes a very good point that refineries operate at higher capacity rates than other manufacturing facilities.

But when our economy runs on the product they produce, and we aren't building more capacity--for a variety of reasons--then a decline in the capacity rate becomes something worth noting. Not as a criticism of refiners. But just so that we're aware of this one piece of the supply and demand puzzle that can impact prices.

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About This Blog

Marianne Lavelle, senior writer, seeks out the path to an energy future that doesn’t wreck the planet or put you in the poorhouse.

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