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Suncor Energy Inc T.SU

Alternate Symbol(s):  SU

Suncor Energy Inc. is a Canada-based integrated energy company. The Company's segments include Oil Sands, Exploration and Production (E&P), and Refining and Marketing. Its operations include oil sands development, production and upgrading; offshore oil production; petroleum refining in Canada and the United States; and the Company’s Petro-Canada retail and wholesale distribution networks (including Canada’s Electric Highway, a coast-to-coast network of fast-charging electric vehicle (EV) stations). The Company is developing petroleum resources while advancing the transition to a lower-emissions future through investments in lower-emissions intensity power, renewable feedstock fuels and projects targeting emissions intensity. The Company also conducts energy trading activities focused primarily on the marketing and trading of crude oil, natural gas, byproducts, refined products and power. It also wholly owns the Fort Hills Project, which is located in Alberta's Athabasca region.


TSX:SU - Post by User

Post by MigraineCallon Nov 29, 2022 4:45pm
275 Views
Post# 35137877

Russian Oil

Russian Oil The Russian crude embargo on seaborne crude starts on Dec 5, for western countries. So no oil will be bought by the west, although oil pipelines still flow to some.

For other countries, the price cap starts on Dec 5 as well, the cap amount yet to be decided, the hammer being that 95% of shipping is insured and controlled by the west. That means that other ships and insurers must be found if they are going to ship oil.

Product embargos start in February, gasoline, diesel, jet.

Russia says they won't sell oil to anyone that endorses the embargo, will see.

In any case, it seems unlikely that Russia can muster enough ships to get around the embargo and cap, so best guess by experts is that 1M bpd of Russian oil will be off the market.

This may influence OPECs decision on Dec 4 to keep the current quota levels and not cut more. The oil price has fallen much lower than they want.

Stay tuned...



https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/russias-tanker-fleet-too-small-bypass-oil-price-cap-2022-11-23/

Explainer: Russia's tanker fleet too small to bypass oil price cap

 and Julia Payne
 
A view shows oil terminal Kozmino near Nakhodka, Russia
An aerial view shows the Vladimir Arsenyev tanker at the crude oil terminal Kozmino on the shore of Nakhodka Bay near the port city of Nakhodka, Russia August 12, 2022. REUTERS/Tatiana Meel//File Photo

LONDON, Nov 23 (Reuters) - Russia's oil tanker fleet is too small to fully circumvent a plan by the European Union, G7 countries and Australia to enforce a price cap on its maritime crude exports starting on Dec. 5, analysts and market watchers say.

The amount Russia would be unable to export is expected to increase when EU sanctions on Russian refined product shipments take effect on Feb. 5.

In all the shortfall could mean Russia halts exports of around 1 million barrels per day (bpd), compared with current flows to the world market of around 3.5 million bpd. The impact would push oil and fuel prices higher and worsen global inflationary pressures.


Russia has said it will not sell oil to countries that endorse the price cap.

BUILDING A PARALLEL FLEET

The EU bans seek to deprive Moscow of oil export revenue to finance its military operation in Ukraine.

The impact of Western financial sanctions and of refiners avoiding buying Russian oil has been limited so far because China, India and other Asian importers have increased purchases since Russia's invasion of Ukraine began on Feb. 24.

 

The price cap could also have a limited effect if it causes disruption that drives the market higher and lessens any reduction in Russian revenues.

A G7 plan to take effect on Dec. 5 will allow the shipping industry to help export Russian oil but only at a set price - the price cap.

Maintaining current seaborne flows of 3.5 million barrels per day would require about a third more oil tankers than Russia has access to, said Alexei Gromov, analyst from the Moscow-based Institute for Energy and Finance Foundation.


Russia needs to boost its fleet by 157 Aframax, 65 Suezmax and 18 VLCC vessels, Gromov told Reuters. 60 are owned by Russian companies and another 70 aged at least 15 years - old by oil shipping standards - have been sold this year to unnamed firms that could trade oil outside the cap, Gromov said.

Aframax tankers carry around 600,000 barrels of oil, Suezmax about 1 million barrels, and VLCCs (very large crude carriers) about 2 million barrels.


That would leave a shortfall of 110 tankers should Moscow seek to fully skirt the price cap, Gromov added.

POOLING RESOURCES WITH BUYER COUNTRIES

Russia may seek to bypass the restrictions by pooling its shipping resources with those of top buyer countries that have yet to endorse the G7 price cap.

"If they (Russians) self-insure, if they use the vessels that are not subject to U.S. or EU jurisdiction - whether it's Chinese or Indian or Russian vessels - they may try to set up ways not to trigger these restrictions outright," said Aleksandar Dukic, partner at global law firm Hogan Lovells.

"Certainly building up their own fleet is going to take some time," Dukic told Reuters.

Andrea Olivi, global head of wet freight at commodities trading giant Trafigura, said almost 40 crude and product tankers have been sold to Eastern entities in September at above-market rates given the vessels' age.

Olivi added Russia could in theory find enough crude vessels but was especially short of refined product tankers.

Between 1 million and 2 million bpd of Russian crude and refined products exports could be shut in, a U.S. Treasury official said.

U.S. bank JP Morgan largely concurred with the lower end of that estimate and said it did not believe Russia would be able to ship all its own crude with newly-acquired tankers until 2024 and its products until at least 2025.


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