US yearly oil refining capacity up 77,703 bpd-EIA
By Tom Doggett
WASHINGTON, July 16 (Reuters) - Future growth in U.S. oil refining capacity is expected to be slow because of low petroleum demand due to the weak economy, more ethanol use and consumers buying fuel-efficient vehicles, according to the government's top energy forecasting agency.
U.S. oil refiners added just under 78,000 barrels per day (bpd) in refining capacity during 2008, as the weak economy dampened demand, the Energy Information Administration said.
"The increasing use of ethanol and increasing light-duty vehicle efficiencies are expected to dampen future refined product demand growth, so the perceived need for future refining capacity growth has been declining," the EIA said on Wednesday in its weekly review of the oil market.
The 150 refineries in the United States at the beginning of this year could process 17.7 million barrels of oil a day into gasoline, diesel fuel, heating oil and other petroleum products, the agency said.
That is up just 0.4 percent, or 77,703 bpd, from January 2008 and way down from the 175,000 bpd average annual expansion of U.S. oil refining capacity from 1996 to 2008, according to the EIA.
"The recent economic downturn caused petroleum demand to fall in the second half of 2008, resulting in 2008 refinery utilization of only about 85 percent. Capacity expansions during 2008 were relatively low as well," the EIA said.
Energy companies may also be reluctant to build new U.S. refineries or expand existing facilities in the future if they are subject to strict greenhouse gas emission cutting requirements compared with refineries in India and China that won't have to meet tough emission reductions, said John Felmy, chief economist at the American Petroleum Institute. "It really is a challenging situation," he said.
Valero Energy (VLO.N) continued to have the largest U.S. refining capacity, at just over 2 million bpd, followed by Exxon Mobil (XOM.N), ConocoPhillips (COP.N), BP Plc (BP.L)(BP.N) and Chevron (CVX.N). The five companies accounted for 45.6 percent of total U.S. refining capacity, the EIA said.
The agency said the refineries with the five largest year-to-year increases (barrels per day) in capacity are:
Refinery 2008 2009 Difference
Capacity Capacity
Frontier, El Dorado, KS 107,500 130,000 22,500
Chevron, El Segundo, CA 260,000 279,000 19,000
Calumet, Shreveport, LA 42,000 58,000 16,000
Navajo, Artesia, NM 84,000 95,000 11,000
Sinclair, Sinclair, WY 66,000 74,000 8,000 (By Tom Doggett; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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