Introduction Crude Oil
Introduction Crude Oil
Introduction Crude Oil
ON
Submitted By:
-Anagha Chavan
-Swapnil More
-Rohan Poojari
-Aditi Waghmare
-Deepali Gangawane
INDEX
SR No.
Contents
Page No.
1.
Industry Overview
3-4
2.
5-6
3.
7-8
4.
Trend Analysis
5.
10
7.
Current Scenario
13
8.
Contract Specification
14
11-12
INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION:
Oil is the single most important commodity that holds the position of a key factor in each
and every economy of the world. The worlds richest nations are at their current positions
just because of the oil factor. The importance of oil has reached such a level at which
there is no country in the world, which doesnt need oil and its by-products, and if
somehow it doesnt have much reserves of oil to meet their domestic demand, these
nations are ready to import the product at any cost. Many nations have a huge share of
their earnings constituted by oil exports only. Every industry requires oil to function
properly either directly or indirectly as both crude oil and its by-products serve as their
inputs. Crude oil holds importance as input to the global growth engine since it is the
most important source of energy accounting for more than two fifth of the global energy
consumption. Crude oil dominates the total energy supply with 33% share.
The value of crude oil is entirely determined by the petroleum products (such as gasoline)
which are derived through refining crude and its use as a feedstock for production of
petrochemical products such as fertilizer and PVC. Crude oil is refined to make
petroleum products grouped under three categories: light distillates (liquefied petroleum
gas, gasoline/petrol), middle distillates (kerosene, diesel) and heavy distillates (heavy fuel
oil, lubricating oil, wax)
VALUE CHAIN:
3
The primary characteristics studied while evaluating crude oil quality are the following. I.
API (American Petroleum Institute) gravity is a measure of how heavy or light crude oil
is compared to water. The higher the API, the lighter is crude and yields more refined
products. II. Sulphur Lower the sulphur, sweeter is crude. Sweet crude yields higher
value petroleum products such as gasoline. Therefore light sweet crude oil yields higher
proportion of superior quality of petroleum products such as gasoline than heavy and sour
variety of crude and are traded at a premium. Crude oil is classified into 161 varieties
based on their API gravity and sulphur content (Figure 3). The prominent 'benchmark'
varieties of crude oil are Brent Crude Oil and Light Sweet Crude Oil (WTI) which are
traded extensively in the global futures market.
Exchanges dealing in Crude Oil:
Supply of crude oil is not responsive to change in prices in the short run improving only
in the long run. The only way supplies can increase in short run is drawing down on
strategic reserves. However elevated prices for a long period can spur exploratory activity
leading to jump in supplies in the long run. Proven reserves of crude are an indicator of
quantum of supply of crude oil. Crude oil reserves meet the criteria of proven reserves if
they are feasible commercially to extract given the state of technology. As of 2009, about
77% of proven reserves were with OPEC lead by Saudi Arabia which holds 19% of the
global proven reserves. Russia leads the non-OPEC group with 6% of global proven
reserves.
Yea Consumptio
Change
r
n
200
2,147.44
0
5.72 %
200
2,263.73
1
5.42 %
200
2,333.44
2
3.08 %
200
2,426.33
3
3.98 %
200
2,571.55
4
5.99 %
200
2,550.25
5
-0.83 %
200
2,701.63
6
5.94 %
200
2,888.06
7
6.90 %
200
2,957.30
8
2.40 %
200
3,067.78
9
3.74 %
201
3,115.45
0
1.55 %
2011 3,280.98
5.31 %
5
201
3,450.00
2
5.15 %
201
3,509.00
3
1.71 %
Rank
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Country
SAUDI ARABIA
RUSSIA
UNITED
ARAB
EMIRATES
IRAQ
NIGERIA
ANGOLA
CANADA
VENEZUELA
KAZAKHSTAN
KUWAIT
BBL/DAY
6,880,000
4,625,000
2,500,000
2,390,000
2,341,000
1,928,000
1,756,000
1,645,000
1,406,000
1,395,000
Oil is made of compressed hydrocarbons, the remains of prehistoric (ancient) animals and
plants placed under extreme pressures and temperatures in the Earth's crust.
Hydrocarbons take many forms, including coal, natural gas, crude oil and even diamonds.
Another thing to remember about crude oil and fossil fuels is that they are a nonrenewable source of energy. This means that the world is slowly but surely running out of
its supply of oil, and once it's gone, it's gone.
Supply of crude oil is not responsive to change in prices in the short run improving only
in the long run. The only way supplies can increase in short run is drawing down on
strategic reserves. However elevated prices for a long period can spur exploratory activity
leading to jump in supplies in the long run. Proven reserves of crude are an indicator of
quantum of supply of crude oil. Crude oil reserves meet the criteria of proven reserves if
they are feasible commercially to extract given the state of technology. As of 2009, about
77% of proven reserves were with OPEC lead by Saudi Arabia which holds 19% of the
global proven reserves. Russia leads the non-OPEC group with 6% of global proven
reserves
Year
Production
Change
2000
646.34
-0.97 %
2001
642.40
-0.61 %
2002
664.75
3.48 %
2003
660.03
-0.71 %
2004
683.11
3.50 %
2005
664.66
-2.70 %
2006
688.61
3.60 %
2007
697.53
1.30 %
2008
693.71
-0.55 %
2009
680.43
-1.91 %
2010
751.30
10.42 %
2011
782.34
4.13 %
2012
776.97
-0.69 %
2013
772.08
-0.63 %
From the above chart of 5 years we can observe that from the year 2010 till 2014 the
market was Contango for Crude Oil because in each year mentioned above the future
prices are greater than the spot prices.
In the year 2015 the market switched from Contango to Backwardation because there
was huge supply of crude oil as compared to low demand.
10
2. Weather Conditions:
Like most commodities, seasonal changes in weather affects the demand for oil. In the
winter, more heating oil is consumed, and in the summer, people drive more and use
more gasoline. Extreme weather conditions (hurricanes, tornadoes, thunderstorms) can
physically affect production facilities and infrastructure disrupting the supply of oil and
induce pricing spikes.
3. Political Unrest :
11
If an oil-rich area becomes politically unstable, supplier markets react by bidding up the
price of oil so that supplies are still available to the highest bidder. In this instance, only
the perception of a shortage in supply can increase prices, even while production levels
remains constant.
4. Dollar fluctuations :
The most important currency in the world today. Most of the trade in oil is invoiced in US
Dollar. Whenever India buys oil from Iran, natural gas from Russia and electronics from
China, we do not pay them in Rial, Rouble or Yuan, we pay them in Dollars. Dollar
Rupee exchange rate is thus very important for both imports and export competitiveness.
It goes high, consumers suffer, it goes low exporters suffer.
5. Refinery fires & funds buying:
Oil refiners are major polluters, consuming large amounts of energy and water, producing
large quantities of wastewaters, releasing hazardous gases into the atmosphere and
generating solid waste that are difficult both to treat and to dispose of.
6. Restrictive Legislation :
As the majority of the worlds oil reserves and production are controlled by governmentrun companies, the global oil market is heavily politicized and its functioning is far from
that of a competitive market. Energy policies and taxes in oil-rich countries also affect
the price of oil. If a government bans oil exploration in a place with proven reserves,
such as the Gulf of Mexico, then commodity markets mark this as a loss in crude oil
supply and gas prices go up as a result.
12
13