Title: Jet Fuel Supply/Price Outlook - Fueling the Recovery
1Jet Fuel Supply/Price Outlook Fueling the
Recovery Energy Information Administration
Presentation to 4th International Jet Fuel
Conference February 11, 2002
2EIA Petroleum Data
- Information Available at EIA
- Supply and Price Data
- Forecasts and analysis
- Where to Find EIA Information
- www.eia.doe.gov
- Publications
- Ad hoc requests
3EIA on the World Wide Web
4EIA Petroleum Data Publications
- Weekly Petroleum Status Report
- This Week in Petroleum
- Petroleum Supply Monthly and Annual
- Petroleum Marketing Monthly
- Annual Fuel Oil and Kerosene Sales Report
5EIA Forecast Publications
- Short-term Energy Outlook
- Annual Energy Outlook
- International Energy Outlook
6WTI Crude Oil Price Potential for Volatility
Around Base Case
Sources History EIA Projections Short-Term
Energy Outlook, February 2002.
7OPEC 10 Crude Oil Production Is Much Lower After
Quota Cuts in 2001 2002
History
Projections
Sources History EIA Projections Short-Term
Energy Outlook, February 2002.
8EIAs World Petroleum Balance
Sources History EIA Projections Short-Term
Energy Outlook, February 2002.
9Low Total OECD Oil Stocks Keep Market Balance
Tight
Total includes commercial and government stocks.
Source History -- EIA
10Fundamentals Explain High Crude Oil Prices
Source EIA and OECD
11U.S. Reflects World Market
Sources History EIA Projections Short-Term
Energy Outlook, February 2002.
12Crude Oil Inputs Ended 2001 at Normal Levels
Dec 2000 Was Unusually High
Source EIA
13The Cycle of Refinery Inputs andProduct
Inventories
Increase in Crude Inputs (Summer 2001)
Increase in Product Stocks (Fall 2001)
Increased Refinery Margins (Summer 2002)
Decrease in Product Stocks (Spring 2002)
Reduced Refinery Margins (Early Winter
2001/02)
Decrease in Crude Inputs (Late Winter 2001/02)
14Drop in Demand Leaves Spare Capacity - For Now
Source EIA
15Jet Fuel Inventories Will Fall Back to Earlier
Levels
Source EIA
16Prices Will Follow Crude Oil, Refinery Margins
Source EIA
17In the Longer Term, U.S. Product Demand Will
Further Outstrip Refinery Capacity
Refinery Capacity
Other
Residual Fuel
Distillate
Jet Fuel
Gasoline
Source EIA
18Global Refinery Capacity Will Have to Grow
Dramatically
Source EIA
19Conclusions
- Despite recent output cuts, weak global demand
will let oil prices rise only moderately this
year - The decline in jet fuel demand since 9/11 has
left excess capacity in the system - in the short
run - Over the longer term, in the U.S. and worldwide,
demand for jet fuel (and other petroleum
products) will far outstrip existing refinery
capacity - Global refinery capacity, along with oil
production, must grow dramatically over the next
20 years in order to supply needs for all refined
products