Plus Australia's pivotal transition milestone

Global news you can trust.

Download the Reuters App.

 

Power Up

Power Up

 

A Reuters Open Interest newsletter

 

By Gavin Maguire, ROI Energy Transition Columnist

 
 

Data refreshes every time you open this email. For more energy news, click here. Please send any feedback to powerup@thomsonreuters.com.

 

Hello Power Up readers,

Brent crude oil prices remain locked in a holding pattern between $60 and $70 a barrel, supported by the prospect of future proposed output cuts but capped by abundant current global supplies. We'll dig into the latest signs of the oil glut below. 

Speaking of surpluses, supplies of LNG are expected to continue climbing to fresh record highs going forward, but thankfully for U.S. exporters the demand side of the equation looks set to keep growing as well, with a near record volume of binding sales contracts on the books this year. 

Also below, Russian energy group Lukoil's empire looks a little too big for Swiss trader Gunvor to swallow, while Australia's formerly coal-heavy power system has hit a critical clean power milestone.

First up, some of the latest key news stories, analyses and commentary on the Reuters file:

  • US LNG producers ink near record contract volumes: U.S. liquefied natural gas developers are on track this year to ink the second-highest annual number of binding sales contracts, despite industry concerns about increasing capacity and rising costs.
  • Poland in talks to import more LNG from US: Poland is working on a deal to import liquefied natural gas from the U.S. to supply Ukraine and Slovakia, an agreement that would further tighten the European Union’s ties to American energy, two sources familiar with the negotiations said.
  • Asia LNG imports slip on weak China: Asia's imports of liquefied natural gas fell in October from the same month a year earlier, as top buyer China extended a run of weakness that has stretched for a year. But in contrast to the soft demand in the world's top-importing region, demand for LNG has been robust in Europe as the continent builds inventories ahead of the northern winter.
  • Chevron nears green light to expand Leviathan gas field: Chevron is nearing a final investment decision for an expansion of the Leviathan gas field off Israel's Mediterranean coast, but is still waiting for an Israeli permit to export the gas to Egypt, it said on Wednesday
  • Ukraine imports gas via Balkans to keep system running: Ukraine has resumed gas imports from a pipeline that runs across the Balkan peninsula to Greece, to keep its heating and electric systems running through the winter after widespread damage from intensified Russian attacks.
  • Germany's higher gas use hampers Europe's stockpiling drive: Germany's highest gas-fired power generation levels since 2021 are scuppering regional efforts to replenish natural gas stockpiles ahead of the peak season for gas-fired power demand.
  • Bulgaria drafts law to enable seizure & sale of Lukoil refinery: Bulgaria is drafting legal changes that will allow it to seize control of sanctioned Russian oil major Lukoil's Burgas refinery and sell it to a new owner to protect the plant from U.S. sanctions.
  • Offshore wind leaders urge European policy fixes: Denmark's Orsted and Vestas, two of the world's top offshore wind power groups, urged European nations to speed up permitting, improve auction terms and invest in power grids to deliver their potential for strong growth in the sector.

We love to get your thoughts and comments, so don’t hesitate to contact Ron at ron.bousso@thomsonreuters.com or me at gavin.maguire@reuters.com, or follow us on LinkedIn.

 
 

Top energy headlines

  • MEG Energy shareholders vote in favor of Cenovus' takeover bid
  • Too big to swallow? Lukoil empire no simple acquisition for Gunvor
  • US LNG producers ink near record contract volumes, even as fees climb
  • ConocoPhillips lifts dividend, raises output forecast after profit beat
  • Exxon enters Greece with gas deal that expands US footprint in eastern Med
 
 

Oil glut grows?

Western sanctions on Russia and Iran are creating record volumes of oil stored onboard vessels, which are preventing a supply glut from forming in global markets - for now. So said oil trader Gunvor Group's CEO Torbjorn Tornqvist this week.

So far, the "enormous amount" of crude being stored on tankers has provided a buffer against greater oil price volatility, even as output and export levels have been impacted by sanctions. 

But, "if all sanctions would disappear, this market would clearly be quite oversupplied," Tornqvist said.

Oil supplies are also piling up on land, with U.S. crude stocks rising by more than expected last week on higher imports and reduced refining activity.

Crude inventories rose by 5.2 million barrels to 421.2 million barrels in the week ended October 31, the EIA said, compared with analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll for a 603,000-barrel rise.

Click here for the latest oil market insight.

There are even signs of oil oversupply in India - the world's third-largest importer. 

India's Reliance is attempting to re-sell some Middle Eastern crude it snapped up last month to replace Russian oil because of Western sanctions, trade sources said.

The refiner halted purchases from Moscow last month after supplier Rosneft was sanctioned by the United States and it bought at least 12 million barrels of spot crude from the Middle East and the Americas, they added.

To replace Russian supplies, Reliance Industries Ltd has bought 1 million barrels of Abu Dhabi Murban crude, 2 million barrels of Upper Zakum, 500,000 barrels of Qatar Land, the sources said.

Reliance is likely to have purchased even more spot cargoes in trades which were unknown to the market, traders said, estimating that it had probably bought about 16 million barrels in total.

However, Reliance has been offering to re-sell some of these cargoes, traders said. Read on for more from our teams in India & Singapore.

 

Lukoil: Too big to swallow?

Russian energy group Lukoil's foreign empire is suitor Gunvor's biggest acquisition target to date, but looks far beyond the Swiss trader's borrowing capacity, bankers and insiders say.

Lukoil launched the sale of foreign assets on October 27 after coming under fresh U.S. and UK sanctions. Three days later it entered talks to sell to Gunvor.

The Russian company is three times bigger than Gunvor if measured by equity. Its foreign assets include refineries in Europe, shares in oilfields in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Iraq and Mexico, plus hundreds of retail fuel stations around the world.

Vienna-based owner Lukoil International GmbH had equity of $22 billion, its 2024 financial report showed, with $18.8 billion worth of fixed assets such as real estate and equipment and $3.2 billion in cash.

The composition of assets and their value have not changed since 2024, said two sources close to Lukoil. The company also has no debt, according to its filings and the sources.

Gunvor, meanwhile, reported equity of $6.8 billion in 2024.
Read on for more about this intriguing set up that stands to reshape global oil & refined product markets in the years ahead. 

 

Australia's clean power milestone

Australian utilities generated more electricity from clean power sources than from fossil fuels for the first time ever last month, marking a major energy transition milestone for one of the world's top coal and gas exporters.

The energy mix breakthrough is due to a 77% surge in Australia's clean power output from five years ago, as well as a 15% reduction in fossil fuel use over that period.

Generation of coal-fired power - which remains Australia's largest electricity source - also hit record lows last month, helping to slash power sector carbon dioxide emissions so far this year by 13.5 million metric tons compared to a year ago.

Read the full column
 

Find ROI on the Reuters website, and join the debate on LinkedIn and X.