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S.Africa Shuts Down Refinery Over Lack Of Crude

S.Africa Shuts Down Refinery Over Lack Of Crude

Over the Weekend a South African refinery has shut down operations and declared force majeure on the supply of petroleum products due to a delay in the shipment of crude, which highlights the fact that the physical market for crude is tight these days despite a slump in paper-traded oil futures.

According to the company spokesperson, Sasol, the biggest fuel producer in South Africa, was forced to declare force majeure on refined product deliveries on Saturday because of delays in the crude oil supplied to its 108,000 barrels per day (bpd) refinery Natref.

“These delays have impacted availability of crude oil feedstock for processing at Natref, which necessitates the shutdown of its Natref refinery,” the spokesperson said.

“In the circumstances, Sasol Oil will not be in a position to fully meet its commitments on the supply of all petroleum products from July 2022,” said the company, adding that it hopes the issue would be resolved soon and the refinery could resume production at full capacity by the end of this month.

According to Bloomberg’s estimates the stoppage at Sasol’s Natref refinery now means that South Africa’s entire oil refining capacity is currently out of service. Other refineries have closed down production since COVID erupted, either because they would be converted to terminals or because of operational issues. Only Sasol’s synthetic fuel output using coal as a feedstock, of which South Africa has huge amounts, remains fully operational.

Despite the recent massive selloff in the oil futures market because of growing fears of recession, the global physical market for crude remains tight as the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the Western bans on Russian oil have upended trade flows. Refining capacity globally is also constrained as many developed economies, including the United States, have seen refining capacity shrink since early 2020. The U.S., in particular, has lost more than 1 million barrels per day (bpd) of refining capacity over the past two years.  

By Tsvetana Paraskova

Source: Oilprice.com

EntekHub.com

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