โSep-04-2018 08:32 AM
โSep-17-2018 06:24 PM
jerem0621 wrote:Edd505 wrote:
Here's my question, why is #2 more than regular gas when there is less refining?
The law of scarcity
โSep-16-2018 06:03 PM
jerem0621 wrote:Edd505 wrote:
Here's my question, why is #2 more than regular gas when there is less refining?
The law of scarcity
โSep-15-2018 08:18 PM
Edd505 wrote:
Here's my question, why is #2 more than regular gas when there is less refining?
โSep-15-2018 07:44 PM
โSep-15-2018 06:23 PM
Huntindog wrote:I hear you, Diesel was always cheaper then gas until 2004, the year I bought my first Diesel truck.
Here is the deal: If I buy another diesel, the prices will skyrocket. And that is the closest to a sure thing that there is in this world.
โSep-15-2018 05:34 PM
โSep-13-2018 05:46 AM
โSep-07-2018 08:33 AM
โSep-07-2018 08:15 AM
DirtyOil wrote:
looks like more of a distribution issue then a refining issue along with poor execution of the process.
โSep-06-2018 08:07 PM
ShinerBock wrote:
Well I guess the US Energy Information Administration just doesn't know what they are talking about.
"Refiners revamped (retrofitted) existing refinery units to produce ULSD, representing two-thirds of highway diesel production, and thatthe remaining refineries built new units. The capital cost of revamping is assumed to be 50 percent of the cost of adding a new unit.
The amount of ULSD downgraded to a lower value product because of sulfur contamination in the distribution system is assumed to be 7.8 percent at the start of the program, declining to 2.2 percent at full implementation. The decline reflects the expectation that the distribution system will become more efficient at handling ULSD with experience.
A revenue loss is assumed to occur when a portion of ULSD that is put into the distribution system is contaminated and must be sold as a lower-value product. The amount of the revenue loss is estimated offline based on earlier NEMS results and is included in the AEO2012 ULSD price projections as a distribution cost. The revenue loss associated with the 7.8 percent downgrade assumption for 2009 is 0.7 cents per gallon. The revenue loss estimate declines to 0.2 cents per gallon after 2010 to reflect the assumed decline to 2.2 percent.
The capital and operating costs associated with ULSD distribution are based on assumptions used by the EPA in the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) of the rule 9. Capital costs of 0.7 cent per gallon are assumed for additional storage tanks needed to handle ULSD during the transition period. These capital expenditures have been fully amortized by 2011. Additional operating costs for distribution of highway diesel of 0.2 cent per gallon are assumed over the entire projection period. Another 0.2-cent cost per gallon is assumed for lubricity additives. Lubricity additives are needed to compensate for the reduction of aromatics and high-molecular-weight hydrocarbons stripped away by the severe hydrotreating used in the desulphurization process."
US EIA Petroleum Market Module
From articles I have read, it cost over $8 billion to revamp the refineries to make ULSD.
โSep-06-2018 04:58 PM
โSep-06-2018 03:17 PM
โSep-06-2018 01:57 PM
DirtyOil wrote:
And as I stated... Canada and the US are years ahead of the so called "Global limits" our ECA has had limits set at 1000ppm, for several years now! No reason why we can't have ULSD across the board, for both on/off road, rail/marine and globally... process is there. Processors just need a kick in the rear and get their heads out of the sand.
โSep-06-2018 12:30 PM
ShinerBock wrote:
As I stated before, the current low sulfur fuel used in local US and EU waters, or Emission Control Area's(ECA) as they are called, effects a much smaller amount of marine fuel demand than the new 2020 regulation will.
IMO 2020:
Whatโs next?Shell wrote:
The transition to 0.5%S will cause more changes to global marine industry than the switch to the 0.1%S fuel in the ECAs. The impact of this transition represents approximately 75% of global marine fuel demand when compared to the demand of ECA.
This article from BP has a better map of current ECA's.
MARPOL 2020 and beyond
โSep-06-2018 11:21 AM
Shell wrote:
The transition to 0.5%S will cause more changes to global marine industry than the switch to the 0.1%S fuel in the ECAs. The impact of this transition represents approximately 75% of global marine fuel demand when compared to the demand of ECA.