Stories tagged with inventories

Is a Net Oil Export Hurricane Hitting the US Gulf Coast?

This is a guest post by Jeffrey J. Brown, known on TOD as westexas. Jeff is an independent petroleum geologist in the Dallas, Texas area. His e-mail address is westexas@aol.com.

Building on prior work by many people, including Matt Simmons and Kenneth Deffeyes, and largely based on great technical work by Khebab, I have been intensively studying the Net Oil Export issue for more than two years.

The simple mathematical model I have been using to talk about our export situation is called the Export Land Model (ELM). Recently, data and media reports have shown that the concerns I have expressed about our export situation are growing more valid each day.

Venezuela and Mexico are critically important to the US because of their proximity to the refineries on the Gulf Coast. From what I have been able to discern, it takes an average of about five days for a tanker to get to the US from Venezuela and Mexico versus about 30 days from the Persian Gulf. Based on recent news reports, it certainly appears that the overall net export decline from Venezuela and Mexico is continuing into 2008.

So, what has happened to net oil exports from Venezuela & Mexico to the US and what effect has had this had on Gulf Coast crude oil inventories, and why am I concerned?

Declining Net Oil Exports Versus “Near Record High” Crude Oil Inventories: What is going on?

This is a guest post by Friend of TOD Jeffrey J. Brown, an independent petroleum geologist in the Dallas, Texas area. His e-mail address is westexas@aol.com.

You can also check out Jason Bradford's recent interview with Jeff for The Reality Report over at Global Public Media here.

Building on prior work by Matt Simmons and Kenneth Deffeyes, I have written a number of articles on Net Oil Exports, often with my frequent co-author, “Khebab,” most recently, “Net Oil Exports and the Iron Triangle.” We are going to present a quantitative assessment of future net exports by the top net exporters at the ASPO-USA (Association for the Study of Peak Oil & Gas) conference in October, in Houston, Texas, and we will be doing a preview of the paper in late September.



This Week In Petroleum (TWIP)

This morning at 10:30 am EST, the Department of Energy released their weekly supply reports for crude oil and refined products. Gasoline stocks increased for the 7th consecutive week, and the build of 1.79 million barrels to 203.3 million barrels was higher than the market expectation of a 1.19 mb rise. Gasoline prices initially sold off 2 cents, paused for a while, then dropped sharply and spent most of the day down 5-6 cents. In the last 30 minutes of trading however, the prices rallied back to finish only down 1.5 cents on the day. Crude, after being down $2 at one point, closed down 75 cents.

Robert is on vacation so I'm posting the text of the report for those interested, along with some comments from a prominent Wall Street analyst, Paul Cheng, of Lehman Brothers. The TWIP (the text that accompanies the data released at 1pm), and some thoughts below the fold.