Refinery closures combined with growing demand for gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel are about to start squeezing available volumes—and this squeeze is about to become marked next year. That’s according to the Energy Information Administration, which warned this would plunge inventories to the lowest levels since 2000.
Two refineries are set to shut down this year, the EIA said in the latest edition of its monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook. One is in Houston, and the other in Los Angeles. The Houston facility, owned by LyondellBasell, which has already begun the process of the shutdown, has a capacity of 263,776 barrels daily. The Los Angeles refinery, property of Phillips 66, can process 138,700 barrels of crude daily. The closure of these two would reduce fuel production capacity in the country by 400,000 barrels daily.
The refining industry globally has been experiencing the effects of a declining supercycle even though demand has continued to grow, and, as confirmed by the EIA, this growth will continue. Even so, the record margins of 2022 and 2023 are gone now. Before the new cycle begins, some belt-tightening is in order.
In the U.S., refiners were also subjected to additional pressure during the Biden administration to join the federal government’s climate change-oriented energy policy and switch to biofuels from petroleum fuels. In California, specifically, pressure has been strong, both on the federal and state level, with the government in Sacramento recently demanding from refiners in California to keep a certain level of fuel inventories to avoid price spikes that the refiners themselves attribute to the state government’s energy policies seeking to phase out vehicles using petroleum fuels.
The closure of the Phillips 66 refinery in Los Angeles is one consequence of that policy. There are even reports that California authorities are considering refinery nationalizations to secure the supply of fuels to drivers in the state. Two refineries in California have already converted to biofuel production plants because biofuel production fetches generous subsidies from the state government: Phillips 66 is closing the L.A. facility by the end of this year, and Chevron and Valero are also considering shutdowns.
As a result of these refinery closures, the supply of fuels will understandably tighten, with diesel and jet fuel especially vulnerable, it seems. The diesel tightness will be global and manifest this year, as an estimated 1 million barrels per day of refining capacity across Europe and the U.S. is set to close permanently. Another 800,000 barrels daily in new capacity is set to come online in China, India, and Indonesia, Reuters estimated at the end of 2024, which leaves a gap of about 200,000 bpd. Demand for fuels, meanwhile, has continued to surprise to the upside.
In the United States specifically, refining output is estimated to decline by 190,000 barrels daily this year, the Energy Information Administration said this week, with a further decline of 180,000 barrels daily in 2026. “To meet the forecast increase in U.S. consumption of petroleum products with less U.S. refinery capacity, we expect refinery utilization to remain relatively high and for net U.S. exports of petroleum products to decrease to meet domestic fuel demand,” the EIA said in its Short-Term Energy Outlook.
If demand for fuels continues growing, a shortage may well be on the way, as suggested by the chief executive of Phillips 66 last year. Mark Lashier said in September 2024 that refinery closures prompted by low margins could shave some 700,000 bpd from global refining capacity. He saw this as a positive for U.S. refiners, however. “The US has become very competitive in refining,” Lashier said. “We’re able to compete out in the world global markets.”
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com