Skip to main content
FRI

12

APR 2019
Blog categories
Saudi crude storage data: Aramco vs JODI

Saudi Aramco’s international bond prospectus removed a layer of secrecy that has long shrouded the world’s largest oil company.

The 469-page document detailed Aramco’s revenue, profits, oilfield reserves and breakeven costs, all of which underscored the oil giant’s staggering size and efficiency.

What I was interested in was something else. Did Aramco reveal any information on its crude inventories?

FRI

05

APR 2019
Blog categories
Crude test: Higher oil prices challenge US sanctions policy

Which region in the world do you think has had the biggest decreases in crude inventories so far this year?

Here’s a hint: Its biggest supplier is Venezuela. And the answer is...the Caribbean.

FRI

29

MAR 2019
Blog categories
Deer Park disaster raises transparency questions

It would have been impossible for anyone in the Houston-area to ignore the recent fires raging in nearby Deer Park, where storage tanks holding chemicals that go into making gasoline ignited March 17.

A thick blanket of black, acrid smoke hung over the area for several days creating a public health and environmental crisis.

FRI

29

MAR 2019
Blog categories
Cut off from Iran, Syrian crude stocks down nearly 50 percent

The Wall Street Journal reported March 22 that US sanctions have prevented Iran from exporting oil to Syria since January 2, down from an average of 66,000 barrels per day (bpd) during the last three months of 2018.

Without fresh imports from its major supplier, crude inventories in Syria have fallen.

THU

21

MAR 2019
Blog categories
Fact-checking claims oil inventories are rising

The role played by oil inventories was once again in the news the last few days.

Saudi Arabia’s oil minister Khalid Al-Falih said Monday that the amount of crude in storage needs to fall before OPEC should consider lifting supply restrictions.

FRI

15

MAR 2019
Blog categories
Caribbean empties with Venezuelan supply choked

One consequence of Venezuela’s collapse has been the drawdown in crude inventories across the Caribbean.

Storage tanks began to drain more than a year ago and haven’t stopped. The imposition of US sanctions against Venezuela’s state-owned oil company PDVSA in late January has only accelerated the declines.

Certain locations, like Aruba and Curacao, are nearly empty.

THU

14

MAR 2019
Blog categories
Satellites throw light on mine landslide

In the early morning of January 23, the northern wall of an open-pit copper mine collapsed in Spain.

Fortunately, no lives were lost, but the land slippage led owner First Quantum Minerals to suspend operations for a week.

When incidents occur, like this one at Cobre Las Cruces (CLC), the copper market is eager for information.

FRI

08

MAR 2019
Blog categories
Libya’s Sharara field resumes production

Libya’s largest oilfield came back online this week after having been shut for almost three months.

El Sharara has been at the center of an internal power struggle resulting in periodic shutdowns, most recently since December. We wrote about Sharara last month, which you can read here.

WED

27

FEB 2019
Blog categories
What you missed in London this week: IP Week

In the first part of our two-blog series, highlighting the key takeaways from a week spent in London, we wrote about a roundtable discussion in which we participated hosted by the King Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center (Kapsarc).

THU

21

FEB 2019
Blog categories
Waiting for El Sharara to return

Draw a line 700 km south of Tripoli through the Libyan desert and you will discover something unexpected: a town replete with a massive swimming pool, airway landing strip and modern housing accommodations.

This isn’t a hidden resort. It’s the main facility for Libya’s largest oilfield called El Sharara.

The field can produce around 315,000 barrels per day.