Into the Night
Contributor
There is no 'world standard' oil price, Pretender.The price driver and world standard is Brent.
There is no 'world standard' oil price, Pretender.The price driver and world standard is Brent.
But you are ecstatic they are rising.I am sure someday they will fall again.
Trump is ending Iran's "forever wars".Maybe in two months, more likely in 6 to 9 months, if somehow the war is able to find an end.
. He already answered six to nine months.I am willing to bet on 2 months how about you?
Nah. He just made it all up.Did you go to two in a row that had no gas are were they just random stations that had no gas. And were they out of a grade of gas or were totally out of all grades of gas.
They are designed for heavier oil that WTI.No, it isn't.
They are designed for heavier oil that WTI.
It's just a fact.
Nope. Like I said, it's just a fact.And a refinery set up for that also handles lighter oil just fine. thanks for playing.
Nope. Like I said, it's just a fact.
Feel free to look it up and educate yourself.
And a refinery set up for that also handles lighter oil just fine. thanks for playing.
AI response:
Yes, a refinery designed for Brent crude can also process lighter oils such as West Texas Intermediate (WTI). However, the efficiency of the operation may be compromised. Refineries are typically optimized for specific types of crude oil, and switching to a different type can lead to operational challenges.
Efficiency Considerations
When a refinery that is set up for heavier crude like Brent runs lighter oil, it may not utilize its equipment effectively. This can result in:
- Underutilization of Upgrading Units: Equipment designed for breaking down heavier molecules may not operate at optimal capacity with lighter crude.
- Operational Bottlenecks: The higher volume of lighter products can overwhelm certain parts of the refining system, reducing overall throughput.
And of course it says nothing about Gulf Coast refineries somehow not being able to process lighter oils. That's because they can indeed process any oil.
US-produced WTI crude oil cannot make up global demand for oil products.
And of course it says nothing about Gulf Coast refineries somehow not being able to process lighter oils. That's because they can indeed process any oil. Gulf Coast refineries are full refineries.
Gulf Coast refineries cannot supply European and Asian demands for oil products by processing and exporting American (U.S.-produced) crude oil.
It is complete fantasy.There are significant logistical (shipping and loading) barriers that would prevent U.S. Gulf Coast exports from realistically replacing the Persian Gulf’s usual crude oil export volumes, even if sufficient U.S. production and refining balance existed.
jensendavid.substack.com +1
The Persian Gulf (primarily Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq, Kuwait, and Iran via the Strait of Hormuz) historically exported roughly 15–21 million barrels per day (b/d) of crude and condensate in normal pre-2026 conditions—accounting for a huge share of global seaborne trade (often ~20+ million b/d through Hormuz in peak years). The 2026 Iran-related disruptions have slashed this dramatically (e.g., 13–14.5 million b/d offline), prompting a surge in U.S. exports, but the scale mismatch and shipping constraints remain decisive.
finance.yahoo.com +1
U.S. crude exports (almost entirely from the Gulf Coast) have hit record levels of ~4.9–5.2 million b/d in April/May 2026 amid the crisis—up from typical 3.5–4.5 million b/d—but analysts describe this as already testing or nearing the practical ceiling (monthly sustainable ~5–5.5 million b/d, with weekly peaks possibly to 6–6.5 million b/d).
Total Gulf Coast nameplate export capacity is estimated at ~7.1 million b/d across terminals, but real-world throughput is constrained far below what would be needed to offset Persian Gulf volumes.
energynewsbeat.com +2
Key logistical shipping and loading barriers
In practice, U.S. Gulf Coast exports have proven highly responsive during the 2026 disruptions (stepping up to fill part of the gap), but they function as a supplement, not a replacement.
- Limited terminal and VLCC loading infrastructure: The U.S. Gulf Coast relies on a handful of key terminals (e.g., Corpus Christi’s Ingleside Energy Center and South Texas Gateway, Houston-area facilities, Energy Transfer’s Nederland, and Louisiana’s LOOP offshore port). Only LOOP can fully load Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs, ~2 million barrels each) directly in deep water. Most onshore terminals (Corpus Christi, Houston Ship Channel) have channel depths of ~45–54 feet after recent dredging—insufficient for a fully laden VLCC (requires ~72 feet).
- Result: Partial loading at the dock (often 1–1.2 million barrels), followed by reverse lightering offshore in the Gulf using smaller tankers (Aframax/Suezmax) to top up VLCCs. This process adds days per cargo, requires extra vessels, and creates scheduling bottlenecks.
- Direct VLCC-capable berths are few (e.g., only ~500,000 b/d effective direct VLCC loading in Corpus Christi despite higher overall port volumes). Docks are already pushing limits with the current surge. Proposed offshore deepwater terminals (for full VLCC loads) have faced delays or stalls.
energypolicy.columbia.edu +2- Tanker fleet availability and scheduling constraints: The current crisis has already tightened the global tanker market: VLCC availability along the U.S. Gulf Coast dropped ~41% in recent weeks (halved to ~10 vessels at times), with Suezmax and Aframax also scarce. An “armada” of 60–80+ empty VLCCs has been steaming toward the Gulf, but loading them takes time—each VLCC requires 1–3 days to load, plus transit and berthing queues.
- At current rates, filling dozens of VLCCs could take weeks to a month, creating backlogs. Incremental barrels beyond ~5 million b/d become exponentially more expensive due to higher freight and logistics.
- Persian Gulf terminals (e.g., Ras Tanura, Fujairah) were designed for massive, simultaneous VLCC loadings with minimal lightering. U.S. operations lack that scale.
reuters.com +2
- Longer transit times and route inefficiencies:
- Persian Gulf to Asia (main destination for ~89% of Hormuz flows): Typically 25–30 days (or up to a month).
- U.S. Gulf Coast to Asia: Substantially longer—~40–50+ days (via Panama Canal or around South America/Cape routes). This requires more tankers in circulation to deliver the same daily volume to buyers, inflating costs and fleet demand.
- To Europe: U.S. routes are competitive or shorter in some cases, but Asia drives the volume mismatch. Higher freight rates (already surging on U.S. Gulf–Asia routes) and longer voyages reduce economic viability versus Persian Gulf supply.
- Additional operational frictions:
- Port/channel congestion: Surge loadings strain docks, channels, and support infrastructure (pilots, tugs, storage).
- Pipeline feed to terminals: While not purely shipping, Permian-to-Gulf pipelines are often near capacity, limiting sustained high export rates.
- Weather and seasonal risks: Gulf hurricanes can disrupt operations for days/weeks.
- Cost escalation: Every extra barrel beyond current levels incurs higher per-barrel freight/logistics penalties; VLCC rates have rallied sharply on the demand spike.
finance.yahoo.com +1
Scaling to Persian Gulf volumes (~3–4× current U.S. export rates) would require years of new infrastructure, a vastly larger dedicated tanker fleet, and fundamentally different port designs—none of which exist or could be built quickly. Global oil shipping remains optimized around the Persian Gulf’s massive, efficient export hubs.
Im just going to assume what all the players say is true.
Saudi Arabia says they have a pipeline that brings some portion of their production to the red sea.
UAE says they have some portion of their production going to Oman by the Habshah pipeline.
Oman is on the other side of Hormuz and says it is not affected
Iran says their tankers are piercing thru the blockade and that they are sending oil to china via train.
Given that so much oil is getting out thru various means why would prices go that high?
There are significant logistical (shipping and loading) barriers that would prevent U.S. Gulf Coast exports from realistically replacing the Persian Gulf’s usual crude oil export volumes, even if sufficient U.S. production and refining balance existed.