| WSJ : diesel prices / feedstocks to oil refineries / which oil is in short supply / etc. .................. 
 ENERGY & OIL
 
 Sept. 6, 2023
 
 Saudi Cuts Send World Diesel Prices Soaring
 
 European refineries have been starved of both Russian and Middle Eastern crude
 
 By Anna Hirtenstein
 
 One corner of the global energy market is getting especially squeezed by Saudi Arabia and Russia’s oil-production cuts: diesel.
 
 Diesel  prices have climbed more than 40% in the U.S. and Europe since May,  when surprise output cuts by Saudi Arabia and some other members of the  OPEC+ oil cartel took effect, Argus data showed. Most actively traded  futures prices for Brent crude and West Texas Intermediate, the  benchmarks for crude oil, are up 13% and 14% in the same time frame.
 
 The  run-up is translating into higher pump prices and trucking costs in the  U.S. and elsewhere in the West. It reflects the fact that heavier  kinds of oil are better suited to making diesel, while others, such as  lighter U.S. crude, are more readily turned into gasoline.
 
 In  the U.S., while the national average price for unleaded gasoline added 7  cents a gallon in August, according to AAA, the cost of diesel rose by  42 cents a gallon.
 
 “Diesel is more heavily affected because of  the type of crude that’s being taken out of the market,” said Alan  Gelder, vice president for refining, chemicals and oil markets in Wood  Mackenzie’s commodities research business. “Saudi’s oil provides a  higher yield for diesel than lighter crude oils. This loss adds further  cost to the economy.”
 
 Saudi Arabia said Tuesday that it will  extend its current cut of one million barrels of oil a day through to  year-end. Traders and analysts had widely anticipated that the policy  would last through to October, so the longer time frame surprised the  market. Russia’s deputy prime minister, Alexander Novak, said Russia  will also keep its 300,000 barrel-a-day output cut through the end of  2023.
 
 Europe is hardest hit because its refineries were designed  to process a steady stream of Russian feedstocks. But these supplies  have largely wound down because of sanctions in the wake of the Ukraine  invasion.
 
 Russia’s medium-sour crude is similar to oil from the  Middle East, meaning Saudi oil has commonly been used as a replacement,  analysts say. The kingdom’s output cuts have made this type of crude  harder to obtain.
 
 “Europe has had more than a year to get used to  this situation with Russia and for natural gas, it has adapted. But  this diesel issue hasn’t been solved,” said Bjarne Schieldrop, chief  commodities analyst at SEB. “And this issue is spilling into diesel  markets everywhere.”
 
 Shell operates Europe’s largest refinery in  Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The Pernis facility used to churn out large  quantities of diesel made with Russian feedstocks. After the Ukraine  invasion, it turned to Saudi sour crude as its main input for this  product. Now, it is buying more U.S. crude and producing less diesel.
 
 Prices  for sour crude have risen, with the Dubai benchmark recently at a  10-month high. Heavier, sour oils are typically cheaper because they are  harder and more expensive to refine, but prices have overtaken those of  lighter, sweeter crudes. They recently traded at the widest premium in  over a year, Argus data showed.
 
 Diesel has become one of the  biggest trades in energy markets. Leveraged funds, or investors that  trade using borrowed money, recently amassed the largest net long  position in 22 months in heating-oil futures, one derivative of diesel,  Commodity Futures Trading Commission data showed.
 
 But the surge  is bad news for consumers. Diesel powers trucks and trains that  transport goods to end users. Higher fuel costs can feed into elevated  prices in stores, as companies pass them along to consumers.
 
 “It’s  used in the delivery of everything in the last mile. High diesel prices  mean delivery costs to supermarkets and other shops are high. It makes  inflation more sticky,” said Wood Mackenzie’s Gelder. Diesel is also  commonly used to power agricultural and industrial machinery.
 
 About  42% of European Union cars run on diesel, according to the European  Automobile Manufacturers’ Association, so higher prices also hit many  consumers directly.
 
 Some analysts are concerned that diesel  prices could increase sharply during the colder months, particularly if  China repeats last winter’s curbs on exports of oil products.
 
 -- Bob Henderson contributed to this article.
 
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