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EIA: US Crude Exports Reached Record High 1st Half 2023

Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:04 am
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
21184 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:04 am
quote:

U.S. crude oil exports in the first half of 2023 averaged 3.99 million barrels per day (b/d), which is a record high for the first half of a year since 2015, when the U.S. ban on most crude oil exports from the United States was repealed. In the first half of 2023, crude oil exports were up 650,000 b/d (19%) compared with the first half of 2022.

Europe was the largest regional destination for U.S. crude oil exports by volume, at 1.75 million b/d, led by exports to the Netherlands and UK. Asia was the regional destination with the next-highest volume, at 1.68 million b/d, led by exports to China and South Korea. The United States also exported significantly smaller volumes of crude oil to Canada, Africa, and Central America and South America.

Although exports increased in the first half of 2023, the United States still imports more crude oil than it exports, meaning it remains a net crude oil importer. The United States continues to import crude oil despite rising domestic crude oil production in part because many U.S. refineries are configured to process heavy, sour crude oil (with a low API gravity and high sulfur content) rather than the light, sweet crude oil (with a high API gravity and low sulfur content) typically produced in the United States.

U.S. crude oil imports come primarily from historical trading partners such as Mexico and Canada. Heavy, sour grades of crude oil are often discounted compared with light, sweet grades of crude oil because they require more complex refinery units to produce profitable yields of refined products such as motor gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel. Most U.S. crude oil imports take place when it is more profitable for U.S. refiners to process discounted heavier grades because those refineries have already invested in the additional complexity required to refine them.

The rapid increase in U.S. domestic production in the early 2010s increased domestic light, sweet crude oil production. Light, sweet grades of crude oil traditionally benefit from a price premium in the global crude oil market because they yield high amounts of profitable petroleum products from less complex refining processes.

Some U.S. refiners on the Gulf Coast have invested in expanding their light, sweet crude oil processing capacity. However, for many refiners, particularly in the Midwest and along the Gulf Coast, refining discounted heavy, sour crude oil grades remains more profitable.


LINK
Posted by redstick13
Lower Saxony
Member since Feb 2007
38477 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:20 am to
Let’s see how many gloss right over this part and blame being a net importer on politics.

quote:

The United States continues to import crude oil despite rising domestic crude oil production in part because many U.S. refineries are configured to process heavy, sour crude oil
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
64999 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:28 am to
quote:

Let’s see how many gloss right over this part and blame being a net importer on politics.



Want to know why the U.S. doesn't build more refineries to process the lighter stuff? You guessed it. Politics.

quote:

New refineries are unlikely to be built in the United States due to daunting environmental standards and policies that the Biden administration has been implementing to reduce petroleum product consumption in the future. Shockingly high prices for energy is the outgrowth of those policies.


LINK
Posted by redstick13
Lower Saxony
Member since Feb 2007
38477 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:29 am to
And how may new refineries did any of our previous administrations break ground on?

quote:

As of January 1, 2023, there were 129 operable petroleum refineries in the United States. The newest refinery in the United States is the Texas International Terminals 45,000 b/cd refinery in Channelview, Texas, which started operating operating in February 2022. However, the newest refinery with significant downstream unit capacity is Marathon's facility in Garyville, Louisiana. That facility came online in 1977 with an initial atmospheric distillation unit capacity of 200,000 b/cd, and as of January 1, 2023, it had a capacity of 596,000 b/cd.


And that’s likely because of this
quote:

Some U.S. refiners on the Gulf Coast have invested in expanding their light, sweet crude oil processing capacity. However, for many refiners, particularly in the Midwest and along the Gulf Coast, refining discounted heavy, sour crude oil grades remains more profitable.
This post was edited on 10/11/23 at 6:33 am
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
64999 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:33 am to
quote:

And how may new refineries did any of our previous administrations break ground on?



There's a list of them right here.

FAQ
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
64999 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:35 am to
quote:

However, for many refiners, particularly in the Midwest and along the Gulf Coast, refining discounted heavy, sour crude oil grades remains more profitable.



So you mean to tell me that Republicans and Democrats constantly preach about cheaper oil for Americans (GOP) or clean energy for the future (DNC), yet continue to line the oil industry's pockets by allowing them to produce oil that makes them richer? Who would have thought?! It's almost like it's a uni-party or something...
This post was edited on 10/11/23 at 6:36 am
Posted by Corinthians420
Iowa
Member since Jun 2022
6460 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:35 am to
quote:

Want to know why the U.S. doesn't build more refineries to process the lighter stuff? You guessed it. Politics.


Its great you found a website (funded by oil companies) to blame politics, but that skips over the fact they didn't build refineries that process the lighter stuff anytime in the past 40 years before Biden was in office?

quote:

IER is often described as a front group for the fossil fuel industry.[2][3][4] It was initially formed by Charles Koch, receives donations from many large companies like Exxon, and publishes a stream of reports and position papers opposing any efforts to control greenhouse gasses.

No wonder our populace is so easy to control.
This post was edited on 10/11/23 at 6:43 am
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
64999 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:42 am to
quote:

Its great you found a website to blame politics, but that skips over the fact they didn't build refineries that process the lighter stuff anytime in the past 40 years before Biden was in office?


That's because it's always been politics.
Posted by fightin tigers
Downtown Prairieville
Member since Mar 2008
73674 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:44 am to
quote:

Want to know why the U.S. doesn't build more refineries to process the lighter stuff?


Because it isn't profitable?
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
64999 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:44 am to
quote:

No wonder our populace is so easy to control.



Says the guy who uses Wikipedia as a source. And I'm sure those citations are from the most impeccable and unbiased of sources, too. Face it, bruh. You're not special. We're all drones who march to the beat of our overlords.
This post was edited on 10/11/23 at 6:46 am
Posted by Corinthians420
Iowa
Member since Jun 2022
6460 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 6:45 am to
quote:

That's because it's always been politics.


You don't think they preferred sour crude because it was cheaper? It was always strictly politics and they would have gladly paid more for sweet crude if not for politics?
quote:

You're not special. We're all drones who march to the beat of our overlords.

I don't vote for the uni party. I also don't claim that voting for one party (blue or red) over the other would fix all our issues. Those are the people that are marching to the beat of our overlords' drums.

Until everyone can admit that neither party is the answer (and stops voting for them), we are doomed.

Biden is part of the establishment. Claiming Biden's policies (we've built 2 refineries during his term) are why our refineries don't use sweet crude is willful ignorance and ignores the majority of refineries built before his policies came into effect also didnt use sweet crude. It is insinuating that if we just had a different president the past 2 and a half years that wouldn't be the case.

Get rid of Biden and more importantly all the party politicians that have been in the house and senate for more than 2 terms and then MAYBE shite will change for the better.
This post was edited on 10/11/23 at 6:56 am
Posted by CitizenK
BR
Member since Aug 2019
9370 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 7:41 am to
quote:

Want to know why the U.S. doesn't build more refineries to process the lighter stuff? You guessed it. Politics.


That statement is incorrect. Several are permitted and only awaiting final negotiating for offtake and funding. These to be owned by indie refiners and contracts for products with majors like Shell and Chevron.

Posted by CitizenK
BR
Member since Aug 2019
9370 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 7:47 am to
quote:

And how may new refineries did any of our previous administrations break ground on?


It actually started as an entitlement refinery under Jimmah. Those refineries were no more than 10,000 BPD (most were 2,000 BPD) and owners got a monthly check from a major intergrated oil company for $28 per barrel for each barrel they refined previous months. Reagan cut that program right after he was elected.

It grew from that initial 10,000 BPD.

The last grassroots integrated refinery built is now closed. It was Texaco in Convent, LA, when closed it was Shell. Built 1976

Posted by themunch
Earth. maybe
Member since Jan 2007
64619 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 7:49 am to
Because it isn't profitable?

sour crude oil grades remains more profitable


These two are not the same.
Posted by CarRamrod
Spurbury, VT
Member since Dec 2006
57429 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 7:50 am to
quote:

And how may new refineries did any of our previous administrations break ground on?

Obama literally banned building new refineries. Thats why "expansions" were so prevalent during that time period.
Posted by CitizenK
BR
Member since Aug 2019
9370 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 7:59 am to
quote:

You don't think they preferred sour crude because it was cheaper?


Refineries have been for sour crude for eons. What changed in the early 1980's was petroleum coke becoming a profit center. Heavy and very heavy crude will make a lot of petroleum coke due high percentage of asphaltenes. Pre 1980's cokers were built only to squeeze the last light ends from the very bottom of the barrel of oil. The price of petcoke covered cost to get rid of it. New markets were developed for it around 1980 and demand soared. The German steel company, Otto Wolf, developed the European market and went from being famous for its tin plate (sold to canning companies) to being the top petcoke trading company in the world in about 2 years.

The petcoke market made Mexico's Mayan and Venezuelan crudes desirable.

I am presently in discussions with a major US refiner to purchase a refinery never restarted after a 2018 major turnaround by its former owner.

West Texas Light which is predominant in those tight shale plays is not just a light sweet crude but technically it is condensate. It was legally changed to crude oil in 1970's legislation to ban exports (except from CA and AK) and approve the Alaskan Pipeline.

A number of small refineries have shutdown because refining this light stuff without first blending with heavy or very heavy crude causes refinery capacity to be reduced by 30%. Condensate splitters have been built to allow refineries to take this light stuff and remove the entrained gases before sending to the crude unit.
Posted by Tomatocantender
Boot
Member since Jun 2021
4728 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 8:12 am to
quote:

the United States still imports more crude oil than it exports, meaning it remains a net crude oil importer. The United States continues to import crude oil despite rising domestic crude oil production


quote:

ragincajun03


So this statement above confirms that the posters fightin tigers, Tango, notiger1997, Power-bottom are all full of shite. Their entire misinformed premise is that the US is a net crude exporter. Every time they follow you in these OP threads they spew all these false narratives, and I've never seen you correct them as the OP. Ironically you seem to be in lock step with them like the time you asked me to define energy independence and those little shits jumped my case with muh NET OIL EXPORTER bullshite. I wish I knew where you actually stood once and for all.
Posted by notiger1997
Metairie
Member since May 2009
58109 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 8:13 am to
LOL
Posted by CitizenK
BR
Member since Aug 2019
9370 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 8:13 am to
quote:

The newest refinery in the United States is the Texas International Terminals 45,000 b/cd refinery in Channelview, Texas, which started operating operating in February 2022


That was originally a Kinder Morgan/BP condensate splitter to take Eagle Ford crude and make usable in refineries after all the very light ends were removed. It ran for a few months and was not economical. I'm surprised that it restarted.

Two refineries were permitted and built in North Dakota under Obama. Their primary market was Bakken drilling and service companies. They shutdown after 2014 due lack of market and non competitive to ship products to market.

One is now a renewable diesel "refinery" which isomerizes vegetable oil/tallow/brown grease into the equivalent of diesel. This is quite different than biodiesel which uses methane to convert vegetable oil to a diesel substitute which is not good at all during cold weather.

A 50,000 BPD grassroots simple refinery was built in Galveston, TX for a bunker fuel company. It was specifically designed to take very sweet light crude oil from Eagle Ford, sell the lighter fractions to other refineries for further processing and use the bottom of the barrel for Heavy Fuel Oil (HFO) for ships to meet new low sulfur standards used globally.

This was built during Trump and completed in June 2020. The problem is that the owner decided to score a major coup with buying some heavy crude and well under market price. There was a lawsuit pissing match between owner and EPC firm over payment has been resolved in favor of the EPC firm.
Posted by Corinthians420
Iowa
Member since Jun 2022
6460 posts
Posted on 10/11/23 at 8:18 am to
quote:

CitizenK

Thank you for the insight
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