Oil prices fall as global inflation rates solicit concern

Oil prices retreated on Thursday amid the economic slowdown and global recession fears to ease pressure on oil demand.

International benchmark Brent crude was trading at $106.42 per barrel at 0606 GMT for a 1.01% decrease after closing the previous session at $107.51 a barrel.

American benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was at $104.62 per barrel at the same time for a 1.03% drop after the previous session closed at $105.71 a barrel.

Inflation data from around the world showed new highs this week.

Annual consumer inflation in the US rose 8.3% in April, according to the Department of Labor on Wednesday. In a speech after the data release, US President Joe Biden said that inflation in the country is ‘unacceptably high.’

Although the Fed’s monetary tightening aims to relieve inflationary pressures, it has caused fears of a recession.

Reports on Tuesday confirmed that the annual inflation in Greece rose to 10.2% in April from 8.9% in March, the first double-digit rate in 27 years. The annual inflation rate in Denmark reached its highest level since 1984, reaching 6.7% in April due to rising energy and food prices.

Reports on Wednesday showed that Germany’s inflation hit an all-time high for the second consecutive month in April at 7.4%. The annual inflation rate in China rose to 2.1% in April, exceeding the market expectation of a 1.8% rise and marking the highest level since last November.

Inflation in Portugal spiked to 7.2% in April, the highest level since March 1993.

On a global scale, while price rises are expected to ease in developed countries, which are slowly recovering from the deep economic recession caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, inflation is forecast to rise from increased energy, food and commodity prices due to the Ukraine-Russia war.

Additionally, ongoing COVID-19 lockdowns in China, the world’s top crude importer, continues to weigh on oil prices as demand for fuel drops.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Oil and gas companies gamble on emission mitigation technologies

Emission reduction plans of oil and gas companies to invest in expensive and unproven technologies at scale are putting investors at risk, a new report from financial think tank Carbon Tracker finds Thursday.

‘Oil and gas companies are gambling on emissions mitigation technologies that pose a huge risk to both investors and the climate,’ says Maeve O’Connor, a Carbon Tracker analyst and author of the report entitled Absolute Impact 2022: Why Oil and Gas Companies Need Credible Plans to Meet Climate Targets.

‘Most of these technologies are still at an early stage of development, with few large projects working at anything like the scale required by company goals, while solutions that involve tree planting require huge areas of land,’ she said, adding that it remains to be seen whether these technologies will be technically feasible or economically viable given the huge costs involved.

The report, therefore, warns that if emission mitigation technologies (EMT) projects fail to capture or offset the intended amount of carbon, companies could face litigation, regulatory sanctions and reputational damage.

All but one of the 15 companies have announced plans to use EMTs, according to the report.

‘If companies do go ahead with new production, relying on EMTs to offset carbon, this will impose extra costs and therefore increase the risk that assets will be stranded,’ the think tank warns.

Carbon Tracker ranked climate policies by assessing three key criteria, which it says are minimum preconditions for claiming to be aligned with the Paris climate agreement.

These criteria include setting absolute emissions reductions with interim targets before 2050, covering full lifecycle emissions, including carbon released when oil and gas are burned, and covering worldwide emissions from all projects in which they have a stake, including sales of products they refine from crude purchased from other companies.

According to the report, only two oil and gas companies out of the largest publicly traded 15 have updated their climate targets since May 2021.

Among the analyzed companies are Eni, Repsol, Total Energies, bp, Shell, Equinor, Occidental, Chevron, Conoco Philips, EQT, EOG Resources, Devon, Pioneer, Suncar and ExxonMobil.

The report warns that net zero targets are not enough for companies to be aligned with Paris, as they need absolute limits on future emissions and significant interim targets as most companies are failing to commit to absolute cuts in emissions.

– American companies lag behind Europeans

The report finds that all North American companies lag behind European companies, with ExxonMobil having the weakest policy.

The company adopted a net zero target last year but has not pledged specific emissions cuts, having excluded 95% of lifecycle emissions from the products it sells.

Eni is one of the four companies accepting absolute cuts in emissions from the production and use of its products. It has the strongest climate policy pledging a 35% cut by 2030, up from its previous 25% target.

Repsol’s new pledge of a 30% cut by 2030 sees it shoot up to second place, the report says.

‘Financial institutions must scrutinize companies’ emissions targets and whether their plans to achieve them are practical and credible in order to assess alignment with global climate goals,’ Mike Coffin, Carbon Tracker head of oil, gas and mining and report author, says.

‘This is particularly so for companies that seek to ‘create space’ for further fossil investment. The best way for companies to reduce both their climate impact and transition risk exposure for investors is to allow their existing production to decline without investing in new assets,’ he notes.

The report also cautions investors that two other strategies to reduce emissions lack credibility.

‘BP and ExxonMobil are among companies selling assets, but this just shifts emissions from one owner to another who could increase production or operate under less stringent environmental standards,’ the report warns.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Lukoil buys Shell’s retail and lubricants businesses in Russia

Russian oil giant Lukoil agreed to buy 100% shares of Shell’s retail and lubricants businesses in Russia, the companies announced on Thursday.

Shell’s decision to sell Shell Neft, which includes 411 retail stations, primarily located in the central and northwestern federal districts of Russia, and a lubricants blending plant located in the Tver region, was in line with the company’s announcement in early March to withdraw from all Russian hydrocarbons, including crude oil, petroleum products, gas and liquefied natural gas (LNG) in a phased manner.

“Our priority is the well-being of our employees,” Huibert Vigeveno, Shell’s Downstream director, was quoted as saying in a statement.

Vigeveno said more than 350 people currently employed by Shell Neft would be transferred to Lukoil under the deal.

The sale completion is expected later this year, subject to regulatory approval.

Source: Anadolu Agency

US crude oil inventories up 2% for week ending May 6

US commercial crude oil inventories increased by 2% during the week ending May 6, according to data released by the Energy Information Administration (EIA) on Wednesday.

Inventories rose by 8.5 million barrels to 424.2 million barrels, against the market expectation of a decrease of 457,000 barrels.

However, strategic petroleum reserves, which are not included in commercial crude stocks, declined by 7 million barrels to 543 million barrels last week, the data revealed.

Gasoline inventories also decreased by 3.6 million barrels to 225 million barrels over the same period.

-Crude production falls

According to EIA data, US crude oil imports fell by 62,000 barrels per day (bpd) to around 6.27 million bpd during the week ending May 6, while crude oil exports declined by 695,000 bpd to 2.88 million bpd.

US crude oil production, meanwhile, decreased by 107,000 bpd to approximately 12.25 million bpd during the same period.

In the April Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), the EIA forecasts that crude oil output in the US will average 12 million bpd in 2022, up from 11.2 million bpd in 2021.

In 2023, crude oil output in the country is forecast to reach its highest annual average on record at 13 million bpd.

Source: Anadolu Agency