Frequently asked questions

We understand that navigating petroleum trade can raise many questions. From documentation to delivery, our FAQ section provides clear insights into our processes, ensuring transparency, compliance, and confidence at every step.

What is the difference between upstream, midstream, and downstream sectors in the petroleum industry?

The upstream sector focuses on exploration and production of crude oil and natural gas from reservoirs. Midstream involves transportation, storage, and initial processing (e.g., pipelines and tankers). Downstream handles refining crude into products like gasoline and petrochemicals, plus marketing and distribution to consumers.

What are the main factors affecting oil prices?

Oil prices are influenced by production costs (e.g., extraction expenses), transportation and logistics costs, crude type (lighter/sweeter oil commands premiums), supply-demand imbalances (e.g., geopolitical events reducing supply), and market speculation (trader sentiments on future events). Global benchmarks like Brent and WTI reflect these dynamics.

What is OPEC, and how does it influence global oil prices?

OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) is a cartel of 13 major oil-producing nations (e.g., Saudi Arabia, Iran) that controls about 41% of global supply. It influences prices by setting production quotas to stabilize markets, ensuring steady income for members while avoiding excessive incentives for alternatives. However, it can’t fully control prices due to external factors like demand fluctuations and non-OPEC production.

What is the difference between Brent and WTI crude oil?

Brent crude, sourced from the North Sea, is slightly heavier and more sour (higher sulfur), serving as the global benchmark for about 80% of international trades. WTI (West Texas Intermediate), from U.S. fields and stored in Cushing, Oklahoma, is lighter and sweeter, primarily benchmarking North American markets. Price differences arise from quality, location, and supply logistics.

What is API gravity, and why is it important in petroleum trade?

 API gravity measures crude oil’s density relative to water using the formula: API = (141.5 / Specific Gravity) – 131.5. Higher API (e.g., >31°) indicates lighter oil, which is easier to refine and transport, fetching higher prices. It’s crucial for traders to assess quality, yield potential, and pricing differentials in contracts.

What is the difference between sour and sweet crude oil?

Sweet crude has low sulfur content (<0.5%), making it easier and cheaper to refine into high-value products like gasoline. Sour crude has higher sulfur (>0.5%), requiring more processing, which increases costs but can yield more byproducts. Traders price sour at discounts due to refining challenges.

What are the main methods for transporting crude oil in trade?

Primary methods include pipelines (efficient for land-based, long-distance), oil tankers (for seaborne international trade, handling 60%+ of global volumes), rail (flexible for remote areas), and trucks (short-haul or last-mile delivery). Choice impacts costs, speed, and trade feasibility, with tankers dominant in petroleum exports.

What is the role of oil refineries in the petroleum trade chain?

Refineries convert raw crude into usable products like gasoline (yield ~44% in U.S. facilities), diesel, and jet fuel via processes like distillation and cracking. They add value by matching regional demand, but output flexibility is limited (±5% yield variation). Margins (e.g., refining costs ~6-11% of pump price) are key for traders assessing profitability.

What are the common ways to trade petroleum products?

Oil is traded via futures contracts (e.g., on NYMEX for WTI), options for hedging, spot markets for immediate delivery, CFDs (contracts for difference) for speculative retail trading, and physical trades using benchmarks like OSPs (Official Selling Prices) set by NOCs. Strategies include spread trading differentials and monitoring geopolitical risks.

Is the world running out of oil and gas reserves?

NO, proven reserves are sufficient for THOUSANDS of YEARS! John D. Rockefeller CREATED the term FOSSIL FUELS to generate a sense of urgency in the oil industry that supplies are running low in order to charge higher prices by insinuating a FALSE supply/demand scenario!  OIL is the BLOOD of the planet and will NEVER run out just like your body will never run out of the red liquid flowing through your arteries and veins!  Additionally, “fossil fuels” has also prompted those promoting the CLIMATE HOAX the opportunity to “sell” solar and windmill farms as well as lithium batteries; ALL of which USE MORE OIL TO PRODUCE the components than will EVER, EVER be returned in clean energy!  Additionally, the disposal of these components when they’ve reached end of service life CANNOT be recycled nor environmentally safely disposed!

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