174 Export Terminals to Focus on Converting Hydrogen into Ammonia by 2035 – Rystad Energy

As hydrogen gains prominence amid the global pursuit of decarbonization and energy security, many major infrastructure projects are considering transportation in the form of ammonia, a safer and more cost-effective method for exporting hydrogen supplies in large volumes. Rystad Energy’s projections indicate that 174 export terminals will primarily focus on converting hydrogen into ammonia by 2035, accounting for 62% of total exported volumes, or about 13.5 million tonnes per annum (tpa).

In support of the broader energy transition, a substantial upsurge in clean ammonia transportation and trade is anticipated, with traded volumes of ammonia projected to reach 76 million tonnes by 2035, four times the volume transported and traded in 2020. This surge, primarily originating from Africa and North America, will lead to a five-fold increase in ammonia exports by 2050 to 121 million tonnes.

Rystad Energy’s estimates show global clean ammonia exports are set to surge to 121 million tpa by 2050, with Africa contributing 40.7 million tpa and Australia with 35.9 million tpa based on announced projects.

There are currently 220 ammonia infrastructure projects globally, with a combined handling capacity of more than 6 million tonnes. Australia presently has just seven terminals with total storage capacity of approximately 173,000 tonnes. Without substantial expansion by 2040, this would be capable of accommodating just two to three days of planned clean ammonia exports.

To handle Australia’s projected monthly exports of ammonia, terminal capacity will need to increase ten-fold.

JERA recently initiated a tender to secure an annual supply of up to 500,000 tonnes of ammonia, starting from 2027. In Germany, major energy companies E. ON, Uniper and RWE have entered ammonia-related memorandums of understanding with international firms, including EverWind (Canada), Greenko (India) and Hyphen (Namibia).

Germany’s H2Global auction, backed by €900 million ($978 million) in governmental support, will be the first of its kind globally and offer 10-year purchase agreements for green ammonia.

Rystad Energy estimate that switching LNG export and import facilities to ammonia would incur estimated costs ranging from 11% to 20% of the total LNG terminal capital expenditure, depending on factors such as demand and location.

Currently, just 30% of the global liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) fleet can transport ammonia, with only 50 large and very large gas carriers having this capability. To meet rising demand, Eastern Pacific Shipping has commissioned four very large ammonia carriers (VLACs) from Jiangnan Shipbuilding Group. These VLACs will become the world’s largest carriers, each boasting 93,000 cubic meters of capacity.

To transport the announced 121 million tonnes of ammonia, approximately 200 VLACs will be required, necessitating an investment of approximately $20 billion in newbuilds. Beyond newbuilds, interest is growing in retrofitting LPG vessels for ammonia carriage. Given the availability of over 1,450 LPG carriers, converting these vessels into ammonia-ready carriers offers a robust transition strategy for shipowners, particularly as demand for LPG tonne-mileage is anticipated to decline amid decarbonization efforts.

Rystad Energy is an independent energy research and business intelligence company providing data, tools, analytics, and consultancy services to the global energy industry.

Rystad Energy, Minh Khoi Le, Kartik Selvaraju, 26 September, 2023

Why Exxon and Chevron are Doubling Down on Fossil Fuel Energy with Big Acquisitions

Chevron announced plans to acquire oil and gas company Hess for $53 billion in stock.

Less than two weeks prior, Exxon Mobil announced it is acquiring oil company Pioneer Natural Resources for $59.5 billion in stock.

On Tuesday, the International Energy Agency released its annual world energy outlook report that projects global demand for coal, oil and natural gas will hit an all-time high by 2030, a prediction the IEA’s executive director Fatih Birol had telegraphed in September.

“The transition to clean energy is happening worldwide and it’s unstoppable. It’s not a question of ‘if,’ it’s just a matter of ‘how soon’ — and the sooner the better for all of us,” Birol said in a written statement published alongside his agency’s world outlook. “Taking into account the ongoing strains and volatility in traditional energy markets today, claims that oil and gas represent safe or secure choices for the world’s energy and climate future look weaker than ever.”

But based on their acquisitions, Chevron and Exxon are seemingly preparing for a different world than the IEA is portending.

“The large companies — nongovernment companies — do not see an end to oil demand any time in the near future. That’s one of the messages you have to take from this. They are committed to the industry, to production, to reserves and to spending,” Larry J. Goldstein, a former president of the Petroleum Industry Research Foundation and a trustee with the not-for-profit Energy Policy Research Foundation, told CNBC in a phone conversation Monday.

“They’re in this in the long haul. They don’t see oil demand declining anytime in the near term. And they see oil demand in fairly large volumes existing for at least the next 20, 25 years,” Goldstein told CNBC. “There’s a major difference between what the big oil companies believe the future of oil is and the governments around the world.”

So, too, says Ben Cahill, a senior fellow in the energy security and climate change program at the bipartisan, nonprofit policy research organization, Center for Strategic and International Studies.

“There are endless debates about when ‘peak demand’ will occur, but at the moment, global oil consumption is near an all-time high. The largest oil and gas producers in the United States see a long pathway for oil demand,” Cahill told CNBC.

Africa, Asia driving demand

Globally, momentum behind and investment in clean energy is increasing. In 2023, there will be $2.8 trillion invested in the global energy markets, according to a prediction from the IEA in May, and $1.7 trillion of that is expected to be in clean technologies, the IEA said.

The remainder, a bit more than $1 trillion, will go into fossil fuels, such as coal, gas and oil, the IEA said.

Continued demand for oil and gas despite growing momentum in clean energy is due to population growth around the globe and in particular, growth of populations “ascending the socioeconomic ladder” in Africa, Asia and to some extent Latin America, according to Shon Hiatt, director of the Business of Energy Transition Initiative at the USC Marshall School of Business.

Oil and gas are relatively cheap and easy to move around, particularly in comparison with building new clean energy infrastructure.

“These companies believe in the long-term viability of the oil and gas industry because hydrocarbons remain the most cost-effective and easily transportable and storable energy source,” Hiatt told CNBC. “Their strategy suggests that in emerging economies marked by population and economic expansion, the adoption of low-carbon energy sources may be prohibitively expensive, while hydrocarbon demand in European and North American markets, although potentially reduced, will remain a significant factor.”

Also, while electric vehicles are growing in popularity, they are just one section of the transportation pie, and many of the other sections of the transportation sector will continue to use fossil fuels, said Marianne Kah, senior research scholar and board member at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy. Kah was previously the chief economist of ConocoPhillips for 25 years.

“While there is a lot of media attention given to the increasing penetration of electric passenger vehicles, global oil demand is still expected to grow in the petrochemical, aviation and heavy-duty trucking sectors,” Kah told CNBC.

Geopolitical pressures also play a role.

Exxon and Chevron are expanding their holdings as European oil and gas majors are more likely to be subject to strict emissions regulations. The U.S. is unlikely to have the political will to force the same kind of stringent regulations on oil and gas companies here.

“One might speculate that Exxon and Chevron are anticipating the European oil majors divesting their global reserves over the next decade due to European policy changes,” Hiatt told CNBC.

“They are also betting domestic politics will not allow the U.S. to take significant new climate policies directed specifically to restrain or limit or ban the level of U.S. oil and gas domestic production,” Amy Myers Jaffe, a research professor at New York University and director of the Energy, Climate Justice and Sustainability Lab at NYU’s School of Professional Studies, told CNBC. 

Goldstein expects the ever-expanding U.S. national debt will eventually put all kinds of government subsidies on the chopping block, which he says will also benefit companies such as Exxon and Chevron.

“All subsidies will be under enormous pressure,” Goldstein said, the intensity of that pressure dependent on which party is in the White House at any given time. “By the way, that means the large financial oil companies will be able to weather that environment better than the smaller companies.”

Also, sanctions of state-controlled oil and gas companies in countries like those in Russia, Venezuela and Iran are providing Exxon and Chevron a geopolitical opening, Jaffe said.

“They likely hope that any geopolitically driven market shortfalls to come can be filled by their own production, even if demand for oil overall is reduced through decarbonization policies around the world,” Jaffe told CNBC. “If you imagine oil like the game of musical chairs, Exxon Mobil and Chevron are betting that other countries will fall out of the game regardless of the number of chairs and that there will be enough chairs left for the American firms to sit down, each time the music stops.”

Oil that can be tapped quickly is a prioity

Known oil reserves are increasingly valuable as European and American governments look to limit the exploration for new oil and gas reserves, according to Hiatt.

“Notably, both Pioneer and Hess possess attractive, well-established oil and gas reserves that offer the potential for significant expansion and diversification for Exxon and Chevron,” Hiatt told CNBC.

Oil and gas reserves that can be brought to market relatively quickly “are the ideal candidates for production when there is uncertainty about the pace of the energy transition,” Kah told CNBC, which explains Exxon’s acquisition of Pioneer, which gave Exxon more access to “tight oil,” or oil found in shale rock, in the Permian basin.

Shale is a kind of porous rock that can hold natural gas and oil. It’s accessed with hydraulic fracking, which involves shooting water mixed with sand into the ground to release the fossil fuel reserves held therein. Hydrocarbon reserves found in shale can be brought to market between six months and a year, where exploring for new reserves in offshore deep water can take five to seven years to tap, Jaffe told CNBC.

“Chevron and Exxon Mobil are looking to reduce their costs and lower execution risk through increasing the share of short cycle U.S. shale reserves in their portfolio,” Jaffe said. Having reserves that are easier to bring to market gives oil and gas companies increased ability to be responsive to swings in the price of oil and gas. “That flexibility is attractive in today’s volatile price climate,” Jaffe told CNBC.

Chevron’s purchase of Hess also gives Chevron access in Guyana, a country in South America, which Jaffe also says is desirable because it is “a low cost, close to home prolific production region.”

CNBC, Catherine Clifford, 25 October, 2023

ARA Stocks Buoyed by Light Ends Build-Up (Week 40 – 2023)

Independently-held oil products stocks at the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) trading hub were buoyed by gasoline and naphtha stocks as they inched higher in the week to 4 October, according to consultancy Insights Global.

Naphtha stocks built after five weeks of drawdowns, are rising. Petrochemical demand was low, with some market participants noting petrochemical crackers in Europe. As gasoline demand continued to fade, blending demand also decreased in the ARA region, adding to the naphtha supply.

Gasoline inventories rose on the week. Demand remained weak in Europe and no exports to the US were spotted, while more summer-grade cargoes were sent to south America. Refinery maintenance in Europe made supply tighter in northwest Europe, somewhat helping demand up the Rhine river.

Jet fuel stocks increased, as demand remained low and no exports were spotted. Diesel and gasoil stocks decreased, mainly thanks to stronger export demand into the Mediterranean region. Demand there appeared stronger to compensate for refinery maintenance, with BP’s 108,000 b/d Castellon plant in eastern Spain to go offline on 15 October. Demand in northwest Europe also appeared firm.

Fuel oil inventories dropped for a fourth consecutive week. Bunkering demand was stable while the arbitrage to Singapore was open. According to Insight Global, there may be a reverse arbitrage route being workable, for cargoes going from the east of Suez into northwest Europe.

Reporter: Mykyta Hryshchuk

Biggest Oil and Gas Sector Deals Since 2000

U.S. energy major Exxon Mobil (XOM.N) is in advanced talks to buy shale producer Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD.N) in a $60 billion deal, sources familiar with the matter said.

It would be Exxon’s biggest acquisition since its $81 billion deal for Mobil in 1998 and could deepen the company’s position in the country’s most lucrative oil patch.

Here are the major deals in the global oil and gas sector since the 2000’s:

2001

Chevron buys Texaco in a $39.5 billion deal and emerges as one of the largest energy firms in the world.

2002

Shareholders of Conoco and Phillips Petroleum, and the Federal Trade Commission approve an $18 billion merger between the companies and created the third-largest U.S. oil firm ConocoPhillips.

2006

ConocoPhillips acquires Burlington Resources in a $35.6 billion deal and gains access to lucrative positions in North American gas-rich basins.

2007

Norway’s Statoil buys the oil and gas assets of Norsk Hydro for $30 billion to create a new energy firm, Equinor (EQNR.OL).

2010

Exxon Mobil (XOM.N) acquires XTO Energy for about $30 billion in stock to bolster its position as a leading U.S. natural gas producer.

2012

Russia’s state oil company Rosneft (ROSN.MM) buys TNK-BP from UK-based BP (BP.L) in a $55 billion deal.

Kinder Morgan finalizes a $21 billion deal to buy El Paso Corp, combining the two largest natural gas pipeline operators.

2014

Kinder Morgan (KMI.N) buys all of its publicly traded units (Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP, Kinder Morgan Inc with Kinder Morgan Management and El Paso Pipeline Partners) under one roof in a $70 billion deal.

2015

Shell (then Royal Dutch Shell) acquires British rival BG Group in a $70 billion deal.

2018

Marathon Petroleum (MPC.N) takes over rival Andeavor for $23 billion.

2019

Occidental Petroleum (OXY.N) acquires Anadarko Petroleum in a $38 billion deal.

2020

ConocoPhillips (COP.N) buys Concho Resources for $9.7 billion in 2020’s top shale deal.

Saudi Aramco (2222.SE) completes its purchase of a 70% stake in petrochemicals company Saudi Basic Industries for $69.1 billion.

PipeChina takes over oil and gas pipelines, and storage facilities from PetroChina and Sinopec in a deal valued at $55.9 billion.

2021

Norway’s Aker BP (AKRBP.OL) buys Sweden’s Lundin Energy in a $13.9 billion cash and stock deal, to form Norway’s second largest listed oil firm.

BHP Group (BHP.AX) agrees to sell its petroleum business to Woodside Petroleum in a merger to create an oil and gas producer worth $28 billion with growth assets in Australia and the Americas.

2023

Magellan Midstream Partners’ unitholders vote in favor of its sale to larger rival ONEOK (OKE.N) for $18.8 billion, creating one of the largest U.S. energy pipeline companies.

Reuters, Seher Dareen, Sourasis Bose and Roshia Sabu, October 11, 2023

Can Gas Prices Keep Falling While Oil Prices Surge?

U.S. gasoline prices continued to slide into the weekend, despite an abrupt upturn in oil prices on Friday. That was a reaction to continued violence in Israel and the Gaza Strip in the Middle East.

What’s not clear is if the price at the pump will follow oil prices higher in the week ahead.

The U.S. national average gas price was $3.601 per gallon on Sunday, the American Automobile Association said, down slightly from Saturday’s $3.609 a gallon and 28 cents, or 7.2%, from $3.881 on Sept. 18. That was the highest price this year.

Sunday’s decline was the 17th decline in a row and the 25th in the 26 days since Sept. 18. The AAA national average has fallen 28 cents a gallon, or 7.2%, in that time. For comparison, on October 15, 2022, the national average was $3.892 a gallon.

The gas-price decline has mirrored the trend of crude oil prices. West Texas intermediate, the benchmark U.S. crude, had a closing peak of $93.68 a 42-gallon barrel on Sept. 27. That was a 16.7% gain on the year.

But crude crude then fell 11.5% through Thursday.

On Friday, however, oil markets abruptly surged, with WTI closing up 5.8% to $87.69. Clearly, the price jump was a reaction to worries about escalating violence between Hamas and Israel.

Oil markets don’t trade between Friday’s close and the start of Monday trading at 6 p.m. ET on Sundays. AAA’s Sunday price was available early Sunday.

The most expensive state for gasoline was California at $5.627 a gallon. Mono County has the highest retail price at $6.772 a gallon. Georgia had the lowest state-wide price: $3.070. The lowest county price was Ware County, at $2.761 per gallon.

The Street, Charley Blaine, October 16, 2023

World’s Oil Refiners Are Struggling to Make Enough Diesel: Here’s Why

While oil futures are rocketing – on Friday they were just below $95 a barrel in London – the rally pales in comparison with the surge in diesel.

The world’s oil refiners are proving powerless to make enough diesel, opening a new inflationary front and depriving economies of a fuel that powers industry and transport alike.

While oil futures are rocketing — on Friday they were just below $95 a barrel in London — the rally pales in comparison with the surge in diesel. US prices jumped above $140 to the highest ever for this time of year on Thursday. Europe’s equivalent soared 60% since summer.

And it could get worse. Saudi Arabia and Russia have turned down the taps on production of crudes that are richer in diesel. On Sept. 5, both nations — leaders in the OPEC+ alliance — announced they would prolong those curbs through year-end, a period in which demand for the fuel usually picks up.

“We’re at risk of seeing continued tightness in the market, especially for distillates, coming into the winter months,” said Toril Bosoni, head of the oil market division at the International Energy Agency, referring to the category of fuel that includes diesel. “Refineries are struggling to keep up.”

The situation is challenging for a global refining fleet that’s been dogged by lackluster production for months. Searing Northern-Hemisphere heat this summer forced many plants to run at a slower pace than normal, leaving stockpiles stunted.

There’s also been pressure on them to make other products instead like jet fuel and gasoline, where demand has rebounded hard, according to Callum Bruce, an analyst at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Other Fuels

All this comes on top of a global refining system that shuttered less-efficient plants when Covid-19 trashed demand. Now consumption is rebounding but many refineries are gone.

There’s still hope that the diesel crunch can ease. With cooler winter months approaching, the weather-related constraints on the refineries overall decrease — even if some of them will undergo routine seasonal maintenance.

“We think margins have overshot for now,” Bruce said, adding that stretched market positioning and the temporary nature of some refinery disruptions could spark a reversal.

Still Concerns

Even so, there are still worries about supply from some key diesel-exporter nations.

Russia — still a major supplier to the world despite Western sanctions — has indicated that it’s looking to limit the volume of the fuel it sends to global markets. 

China — another potential supply-relief valve — recently issued a new fuel export quota, but traders and analysts in Asia said the volume currently planned won’t be enough to prevent a tight market through the end of the year. The country’s shipments have been stuck near five-year seasonal lows for much of 2023. 

Those lower flows are showing up at key storage hubs. Observable stockpiles in the US and Singapore are all currently below seasonally normal levels. Inventories in OECD nations are lower than they were half a decade ago.

The restricted supply has economic consequences. The surge in US futures has been driven in part by truckers snapping up the fuel.

“Diesel is the fuel of the 18-wheeler truck that moves products from factory to market, so when prices spike, those higher transportation costs get passed on to businesses and consumers,” said Clay Seigle, director of global oil service at Rapidan Energy Group. 

While there has been growing hope that the US economy can avoid recession, “an energy price spike – whether in gasoline or diesel fuel prices – could undermine much of that progress,” he added. “This risk is not lost on anyone in Washington as election campaign season approaches.”

Soaring diesel prices may also push refineries to prioritize the fuel at the expense of making gasoline, he said.

Weak Demand

The situation for diesel could have been worse because consumption growth hasn’t been as robust as other parts of the barrel. 

The IEA’s monthly report last week anticipated consumption growing by about 100,000 barrels a day this year. That compares with almost 500,000 barrels a day for gasoline and more than 1 million barrels a day for jet fuel and kerosene.

“It’s a supply issue at heart,” said Eugene Lindell, head of refined products at consultant FGE. “European refineries were also unable to build up supplies over the summer because of widespread unplanned outages which has left inventories tight ahead of winter.”

Business Standard by Jack Wittels, September 29, 2023

The Threat Posed by Rising Oil Prices

Hopes that inflation might really have been “transitory” look premature.

How worried should we be about the oil price?

I’m only asking because it has gone up an awful lot in the last few months. In fact, since it hit a low for the year in early June, the price of Brent crude has risen from just under $72 a barrel to nearly $94 today – a gain of more than 30%.

Thankfully, the US has not seen the same sort of leap in petrol prices as yet. But it is fair to say that petrol prices in the UK bottomed out in June/July and are now significantly higher – up about 7%, from an average of £1.42 per litre to £1.53 now.

It’s entirely in keeping with the ornery nature of markets that central banks around the globe are now largely agreed to be at or near the peak of interest rates, just as the price of fuel — which is of course, a big component of overall price indexes — is taking off again. That obviously bodes ill for global consumption. Even if the world can avoid the scary cost-of-living crisis expected in a wartime economy, the spectre of global inflationary pressures subsiding anytime in the near future is still a mirage.

Supply is tight, demand uncertain

So why is the price of oil rising? Long story short, the big issue right now is mostly on the supply side. Russia and Saud Arabia have reduced their exports, and have been unusually disciplined about sticking to the plan.

This is happening at a time when the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve has fewer barrels in it than usual, because it unleashed them to try to keep prices down back in 2021 and also when Russia invaded Ukraine, and it hasn’t yet rebuilt that stockpile.

Note too that Javier Blas, Bloomberg energy columnist, warns that oil prices are in fact even higher than most of us might think, because the specific kind of crude that Saudi Arabia produces is priced even higher than the benchmarks most of us watch – that is, Brent crude and WTI (the US benchmark).

So, the supply side is tight. As for the demand side – well, for all that everyone seems to expect a recession to kick in at any moment, we’re still not seeing one.

And bear in mind that this is happening while China’s economy is widely regarded as having sat the global recovery out. Yet Chinese economic data actually surprised to the upside this morning (which is one reason the FTSE 100 is having a good day today).

So, I’d say the risks are quite finely balanced there. Say we don’t have a recession and say it turns out that China was just taking longer to get back on its feet, rather than sinking into depression. The idea of a return to $100 a barrel fairly quickly is by no means radical.

Expect a period of inflation scares

So, what would that mean for the rest of us?

There are two big problems with a rising oil price. One is that — speaking purely in terms of what it does to the consumer prices index — it’s inflationary. That in turn makes it harder to justify cutting interest rates. It might even end up putting more hikes on the table at some point, depending on what happens from here.

The other big problem is that even as a rising oil price makes life harder for central banks, it’s also acting as a tax on consumption. As I’ve mentioned many times before, if you spend more money on filling up your car, you’ve less money available for that microwave pasty or terrible bunch of flowers to go with it. Higher oil prices mean less consumption, and for a consumer economy like that of the US or India, that’s bad news.

Of course, these things should, in theory, work against each other. If oil prices rise to the point where it hurts the wider global economy, then what should happen is that we get a slowdown, and then oil prices fall again, because demand is curbed.

But as we all know, theory and practice often don’t entirely reflect each other, particularly given the lags involved. It’s probably safer to say that this is one reason not to assume that inflation will revert to being well-behaved in the near future. Instead, I rather suspect a series of inflation scares is a more likely outcome over the next few years. But we’ll see.

On the upside, it does mean that the commodity and oil-heavy FTSE 100 will quite possibly do better than anyone expects, which does make it look like an appealing hedge for your portfolio. 

By The Business Standard, September 29, 2023

Vopak Agrees Sale of Its Chemical Terminals in Rotterdam

Dutch tank storage company Vopak (VOPA.AS) said on Tuesday it had reached an agreement with M&G Plc’s (MNG.L) infrastructure equity investment arm Infracapital for the sale of its chemical terminals in Rotterdam.

The total purchase price for the three chemical terminals is 407 million euros ($434.72 million) including a conditional deferred payment of 19.5 million euros.

“The divestment of the three chemical terminals in Rotterdam is in line with our strategic goals to improve the financial performance of the portfolio,” chief financial Michiel Gilsing said in a statement.

Vopak launched a strategic review of the terminals in February, opening the door to a possible divestment.

The company said it expects the transaction to partially reverse an impairment charge recorded in 2022 by around 54 million euros, which will be reported as an exceptional item.

By Reuters, September 29, 2023

$2 Billion Ammonia Plant Proposed for Ascension Parish

CF Industries announced Thursday it’s proposing a new $2 billion low-carbon ammonia production facility in Ascension Parish.

According to a Louisiana Economic Development agency (LED) press release, CF Industries is evaluating the feasibility of constructing a low-carbon clean ammonia production plant at its Blue Point Complex. The company is already the world’s largest producer of ammonia.

The proposed facility would be developed jointly by CF Industries and Posco Holdings, South Korea’s largest steel manufacturer.

If the project moves forward as outlined, CF Industries expects to create 50 jobs with average annual salaries of more than $106,000, LED said. 

The companies are exploring the use of autothermal reforming (ATR) ammonia production technology for the proposed facility. ATR is a process that mixes steam with natural gas or other chemicals to create a synthetic gas rich in hydrogen. Combined with carbon capture and sequestration, the technology is expected to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by more than 90% compared to conventional ammonia production plants, the press release said.

Ascension Parish sits within the so-called Cancer Alley industrial corridor and is already home to large petrochemical plants. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s annual Toxics Release Inventory, plants in Ascension Parish emit greater quantities of toxic chemicals from industrial stacks than anywhere else in the country.

CF Industries is currently the largest pollution emitter in the parish and third largest in the state, according to the EPA. 

CF Industries and Posco expect to complete an initial engineering design study on the proposed site in the second half of 2024 and make a final investment decision for the project shortly thereafter. Construction and commissioning of the plant is expected to take approximately four years from that point. 

The state has offered the company a $3 million performance-based grant for infrastructure and project development contingent upon meeting capital investment and payroll targets. The company is also expected to participate in the state’s Quality Jobs tax credit program and Industrial Tax Exemption Program (ITEP) if the project moves forward as planned.

“We believe that low-carbon ammonia will play a critical role in accelerating the world’s transition to clean energy, and this proposed new project confirms the global impact we can have in decarbonizing hard-to-abate industries,” CF Industries President Tony Will said in the press release.

“We appreciate the partnership we have had with the state of Louisiana and Ascension Parish over the years as we have expanded our operations, taken industry-leading steps to decarbonize our existing assets and now as we explore new, low-carbon ammonia production capacity. We look forward to working with them further as we evaluate this proposed facility that could further the growth of decarbonized industry in the state.”

Louisiana Illuminator by Wesley Muller, September 29, 2023

The Price of Oil Is Rising Even More and Is at $100 Per Barrel

A barrel of Brent crude for November delivery rose 0.24% to $93.93. Previously, it was approaching the symbolic threshold of $95 at $94.63.

Meanwhile, the price of October-expiring West Texas Intermediate (WTI) rose 0.67% to $90.77.

Since the end of August, WTI has experienced 13 positive sessions in 16 trading days and its price has increased by 15%.

For Edward Moya of Oanda, black gold continued to rise on Friday on the back of American and Chinese indicators.

In China, industrial production and retail sales exceeded economists’ expectations in August.

In the United States, the Federal Reserve said industrial production rose 0.4% in a month in August, more than the 0.1% expected by economists.

A barrel of Brent crude for November delivery rose 1.98% to close at $93.70, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) due in October rose 1.85% to $90.16.

WTI had not exceeded the $90 mark since the beginning of November 2022.

“The trend continues,” said Andy Lipow of Lipow Oil Associates, with WTI up 14% and Brent up nearly 13% in three weeks.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) estimates published on Tuesday of a supply deficit of 3.3 million barrels compared to demand in the fourth quarter have added some tension to the already tense market.

“The market is watching the decline in reserves with concern,” said Lipow.

In this regard, analysts at ANZ Bank expect Brent to reach $100 by the end of the year.

In the USA, according to the AAA association, the price of gasoline is once again approaching the threshold of an average of 4 US dollars per gallon (3.78 liters) and was at 3.85 US dollars on Thursday.

The black gold is the main cause of the rise in inflation in this country, as shown by the CPI consumer price index and the PPI producer price index released on Wednesday and Thursday.

By Nation World News, September 29, 2023