Mystery of Oil Held on Chinese Islands puts Crude Markets in a state of dilema
China’s got the world puzzling over its oil hoard.
From
underground caverns by the Yellow Sea to a scattering of islands in the
Yangtze River delta, the government has been stockpiling crude for
emergencies in a network of storage sites dotted around the country.
Record purchases this year by the world’s biggest energy consumer have
helped oil prices recover from the worst crash in a generation. What the
country plans to do next could determine where they go from here.
The
difficulty is that nobody outside China really knows for certain. The
government won’t say how much it’s holding or when the tanks will be
full. Energy Aspects Ltd. says the country will probably keep buying and
fill up commercial tanks if it has to, while the likes of JPMorgan
Chase & Co. say the purchases may soon stop. The difference in
opinion is equivalent to about 1.1 million barrels a day, or more than
the Asian country buys from Saudi Arabia.
“China
seems to feel no obligation to report on its strategic stocks, and that
might confer a genuine advantage in its favor,” said John Driscoll, the
chief strategist at JTD Energy Services Pte, who has spent more than 30
years trading crude and petroleum in Singapore. “The scope of their
purchases can dramatically affect fundamentals and prices. However,
since they will likely be shrouded in secrecy, it will remain
challenging to quantify the impact.”
China
outlined in 2009 its plans to build reserves equivalent to 100 days of
net imports. But since then it’s only provided sporadic scraps of detail
on its strategic petroleum reserves, or SPR. That stands in contrast to
the U.S., where the Energy Department has been detailing data on
American inventories for more than three decades.
The Asian
country had about 191 million barrels of crude in its SPR as of the
middle of last year, according to a statement on the website of the
National Bureau of Statistics in December. But it also said at the time
that total combined capacity of seven above-ground sites and one
location with underground caverns was the equivalent of only 180 million
barrels. The figures haven’t been updated since.
Storage tanks stand in China's strategic oil reserve complex in Zhoushan.
Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
The
government also said at the time it has leased space in commercial
sites, signaling it could buy additional oil while more of its own tanks
are constructed. Nobody replied to a fax sent to the press office of
the National Energy Administration asking for details about the SPR.
“SPR
has been a China mystery due to the lack of government data
disclosure,” said Ying Wang, a Hong Kong-based analyst at JPMorgan. The
bank estimates the amount of crude China is putting into stockpiles by
calculating how much more oil the country is buying and producing than
it’s using.
Surplus Crude
That amounted to about 1.2
million barrels a day over the first half of the year, according to
JPMorgan. The bank estimates the country built up a total of about 400
million barrels by mid-2016 out of a targeted 511 million barrels. That
means at the current rate of stockpiling, the storage would be filled up
by August, leading to a potential drop in imports in September.
Energy
Aspects looks at it differently. Because China can shift oil between
commercial and strategic storage, the government may be able to increase
purchases even if it runs out of its own space, said Michal Meidan, a
London-based analyst for the industry consultant. Another 150 million
barrels of commercial storage space is coming online by the end of next
year that can be filled, she said. That means that while reserve buying
may slow, it won’t fall significantly.
“Even if SPR tanks only
come online later in the year, more commercial tanks are starting up,”
Meidan said. Energy Aspects sees demand for the reserves dropping by
only 100,000 barrels a day in the second half of the year to 300,000
barrels daily.
China’s
oil imports have averaged an unprecedented 7.5 million barrels a day so
far this year, government data show. The purchases, along with
temporary production outages in Nigeria and Canada, helped rebalance
supply and demand in the market, leading Brent crude, the benchmark for
more than half the world’s oil, to jump almost 90 percent from
mid-January to June.
Brent crude on the ICE Futures Europe
exchange traded 1.1 percent lower at $47.83 a barrel by 3:20 p.m. London
time. It was at more than $115 a barrel in mid-2014.
In
the U.S., supplies in the strategic reserve were at 695 million as of
Aug. 26, enough to support 149 days of import protection, according to
data from the Energy Department. The government regularly reports how
much oil is at each of its four sites and even breaks down the quantity
of crude that’s held by sulfur level. When it purchased supplies for the
reserve last year, it did so in a bidding system in which the sellers
and even the price were publicly announced.
Deadline Delay
China
plans to build emergency reserves equivalent to 100 days of net imports
by 2020, the nation’s top refiner said in 2009, citing a plan approved
by the State Council. It pushed back completion of the stockpile to beyond the 2020 deadline, according to a Five Year Plan released in March 2016.
“The
Chinese seem to embrace the concept of asymmetric information which
holds that those in possession of proprietary information and data hold a
critical, strategic advantage over the less-informed,” JTD Energy’s
Driscoll said
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