General Characteristics
- Brent
crude oil is a light sweet crude oil from North Sea.
- It
has API (American Petroleum Institute) gravity between
38-39 and has higher sulphur content than the other
well-known benchmark, WTI crude oil.
- Brent crude oil is a global benchmark
for other grades and is widely used to determine crude
oil prices in Europe and in other parts of the world.
- Brent
is typically refined in Northwest Europe, but a major
portion is been exported to the US Gulf and East Coasts,
and also to parts of Mediterranean.
- It
is more expensive than the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) basket, but lesser than
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) because of higher sulphur
content than the WTI crude.
Categories
of Brent Crude
oil
- West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil
is of very high quality. Its API gravity is 39.6 degrees (making it a "light"
crude oil), and it contains only about 0.24 percent of sulphur (making a "sweet"
crude oil). WTI is generally priced at about a $2-4 per-barrel premium to OPEC
Basket price and about $1-2 per barrel premium to Brent, although on a daily
basis the pricing relationships between these can very greatly.
- Brent Crude Oil stands as a benchmark
for Europe.
- India is very much reliant on oil from
the Middle East (High Sulphur). The OPEC has identified China & India as
their main buyers of oil in Asia for several years to come.
Crude
Oil Units (average gravity)
- 1 US barrel = 42 US gallons.
- 1 US barrel = 158.98 litres.
- 1 tonne = 7.33 barrels .
- 1 short ton = 6.65 barrels .
- Note: barrels per tonne vary from origin
to origin.
Global
Scenario
- Oil
accounts for 40 per cent of the world's total energy demand.
- The
world consumes about 76 million bbl/day of oil.
- United
States (20 million bbl/d), followed by China (5.6 million bbl/d) and Japan (5.4
million bbl/d) are the top oil consuming countries.
- Balance
recoverable reserve was estimated at about 142.7 billion tons (in 2002), of
which OPEC was 112 billion tons.
OPEC fact Sheet
OPEC stands for 'Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries'. It is an
organization of eleven developing countries that are heavily dependent on oil
revenues as their main source of income. The current Members are Algeria,
Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United
Arab Emirates and Venezuela.
- OPEC
controls almost 40 percent of the world's crude oil.
- It
accounts for about 75 per cent of the world's proven oil reserves.
- Its exports represent 55 per cent of the oil traded internationally.
Indian Scenario
-
India ranks among the top 10 largest oil-consuming countries.
-
Oil accounts for about 30 per cent of India's total energy
consumption. The country's total oil consumption is about 2.2 million barrels
per day. India imports about 70 per cent of its total oil consumption and it
makes no exports.
-
India faces a large supply deficit, as domestic oil
production is unlikely to keep pace with demand. India's rough production was
only 0.8 million barrels per day.
-
The oil reserves of the country (about 5.4 billion barrels)
are located primarily in Mumbai High, Upper Assam, Cambay, Krishna-Godavari and
Cauvery basins.
-
Balance recoverable reserve was about 733 million tons (in
2003) of which offshore was 394 million tones and on shore was 339 million
tons.
-
India had a total of 2.1 million barrels per day in refining
capacity.
-
Government has permitted foreign participation in oil
exploration, an activity restricted earlier to state owned entities.
-
Indian government in 2002 officially ended the Administered
Pricing Mechanism (APM). Now crude price is having a high correlation with the
international market price. As on date, even the prices of crude bi-products
are allowed to vary +/- 10% keeping in line with international crude price,
subject to certain government laid down norms/ formulae.
-
Disinvestment/restructuring of public sector units and
complete deregulation of Indian retail petroleum products sector is under way.
Prevailing Duties & Levies on Crude Oil
|
Particulars
|
Rates |
Basic Customs
Duty |
10% |
Cess |
Rs.1800 per metric
tonne |
NCCD* |
Rs.50 per metric tonne |
Education cess |
2% |
Octroi |
3% |
War fedge |
Rs.57 per metric tonne |
Market Influencing Factors
-
OPEC output and supply .
-
Terrorism, Weather/storms, War and any other unforeseen
geopolitical factors that causes supply disruptions.
-
Global demand particularly from emerging nations.
-
Dollar fluctuations.
-
DOE / API imports and stocks.
-
Refinery fires & funds buying.
-
The New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) .
-
The International Petroleum Exchange of London (IPE).
-
The Tokyo Commodity Exchange (TOCOM).
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