SINGAPORE: Some oil-hungry Asian nations are taking advantage of the collapse in prices caused by the coronavirus pandemic to build up their crude stockpiles.
Here are some questions and answers about strategic reserves and the region’s oil supplies:
Strategic reserves are stockpiles of oil and other fuels held by governments in secure storage facilities to cover unexpected disruptions to energy supplies.
Major economies such as the US, China and Russia began to build up reserves after oil shocks in the 1970s, according to Ravi Krishnaswamy, regional senior vice president for energy and environment at consultancy Frost & Sullivan.
The events that spurred them to take action were principally the 1973 Yom Kippur War between Israel and the Arab nations, and the 1979 Iranian revolution, which fueled worries about supplies.
China is believed to have the biggest in the Asia-Pacific. Beijing does not give an official estimate but analysts say it is at around 550 million barrels. In comparison, the United States’ strategic reserves currently hold around 630 million.
State-owned China National Petroleum Corporation said recently that the country’s reserves were “obviously insufficient, and have not yet reached the international standard ‘90-day safety line’.”
The International Energy Agency requires its members to hold emergency oil stocks equivalent to at least 90 days of net oil imports. China is an associate member, but not a full member.
Japan’s oil reserves were around 500 million barrels at the end of February, equivalent to national consumption for more than seven months, according to the latest official data, while South Korea had around 96 million barrels in strategic reserves as of December 2019, enough for 89 days.
India, by contrast, has reserves with storage capacity of approximately 40 million barrels — which would last just 10 days in the country of 1.3 billion people.
Strategic reserves are stored largely in secure underground depots like natural rock caverns. The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve, the world’s largest supply of emergency crude, is stored in huge underground salt caverns along the Gulf Coast.
But building underground storage is challenging as it needs to have the right geological formation, and countries also need to build infrastructure to pump oil in and out.
The high cost of building reserves has stopped many countries developing them to sufficient levels.
In Asia, India uses caverns to store its reserves but other countries, such as Japan, put theirs in above-ground tanks.
Australia, which has long had one of the lowest levels of emergency stockpiles in the developed world, said it will take advantage of the fall in prices to develop a strategic reserve in the United States.
The country’s own storage capacity is already full but it has an agreement with the US allowing it to lease space in its Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
In China, the Shanghai International Energy Exchange last month gave approval for state-owned Sinopec Petroleum Reserve to add more storage capacity.
One storage depot in southern Guangdong province can hold up to 600,000 cubic meters (3.8 million barrels), while another in northern Hebei province can hold up to one million cubic meters.
India’s Ministry of Petroleum tweeted on April 15 it was buying crude to fill its reserves, stored in rock caverns, “to their full capacity.”
Madhu Nainan, editor of industry publication PetroWatch, however, questioned whether the country had enough available storage space to build up capacity quickly.
“In India, storage tanks and pipelines are full and dealers’ tanks are full,” he told AFP.
Japan and South Korea, with ample stockpiles, have not announced plans to build up their reserves substantially.
A Japanese trade ministry official said current levels were sufficient, while Seoul plans to increase stockpiles by less than one percent this year.
It looks unlikely, in the short term at least. Many observers believe economic activity won’t bounce back quickly with the gradual lifting of lockdowns but only when a vaccine for the virus is discovered — which could be some time away.
“Low oil prices won’t turbocharge Asian economic recovery,” Jeffrey Halley, OANDA senior market analyst, told AFP.
Major oil-importers in Asia — such as China, Japan and South Korea — would in usual times benefit from low prices but this is unlikely to be the case immediately given the economic devastation caused by the pandemic.
In Japan, for example, “the price crash has hit financial markets hard, which is negatively affecting the Japanese economy,” said Toshihiro Nagahama, an economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.
“We can’t apply our usual framework to this unprecedented period.”
Some economists, however, expect oil prices to stay low for a long period, meaning major importers could eventually emerge winners.
“Oil prices are expected to remain low to some extent when the post-corona era comes, and given the current situation, it will have a positive effect on (South Korea’s) economy in terms of recovery,” said Jung Jun-hwan, a researcher at the Korea Energy Economics Institute.
There are also “obvious losers” in Asia, such as oil exporters Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei, said OANDA’s Halley.
Oil-hungry Asian nations pounce on low prices to build stockpiles
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Oil-hungry Asian nations pounce on low prices to build stockpiles
- In Asia, India uses caverns to store its reserves; others, such as Japan, put theirs in above-ground tanks
- There are also “obvious losers” in Asia, such as oil exporters Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei