Saturday, January 22, 2011

Trends in Brazilian Petroleum Production and Consumption

As noted in Where in the world does the USA import its oil from?, based on the data reported in U.S. Total Crude Oil and Products Imports (“Total Imports”),  I estimated that Brazil was the tenth largest petroleum exporter to the USA in 2009.


The historic data in “Total Imports” suggest that Brazil’s importance as a petroleum supplier to the USA has always been relatively modest:  there were very small exports to the USA until the 1980s then up to 1-2% of the USA’s total imports in the late 80s, then back below 1% to almost nothing in the mid 90s, then a steady increase in the 2000s until, in 2005, Brazil once again supplied over 1%, and now 2.6% of the USA’s total exports in 2009 (0.309 mbd). 

Brazil’s Oil production history and potential
Perhaps it should be no surprise that Brazilian exports to the USA for the last 30 years have always been fairly modest—throughout this period Brazil has been a net importer of oil.  According to the EIA’s Country Analysis Brief Brazil is the 10th largest energy consumer in the world and the 3rd largest consumer in the Western Hemisphere, behind the United States and Canada.  In 2006, 49% of Brazil’s energy consumption was from the consumption of oil, followed by hydroelectric power (36%) and natural gas (7%). 

The offshore Campos and Santos Basins account for the bulk of Brazil’s proven oil reserves of about 13 bbs, and, for the steady increase in oil production in the 2000s.  The EIA estimates that Brazils increasing crude oil production will make it a net oil exporter in 2009. 

Similar to Mexico, Venezuela, Nigeria and Angola, most of Brazi’s oil production is controlled by a state-owned entity.  Petrobras been ramping up production through the 2000s, and since 2008, has deployed two floating production, storage, and offloading (FPSO) platforms having a total production capacity of 0.36 mbd.  In the 2000s the Brazilian government has allowed a number of privately owned companies, usually in co-operation with Petrobras, to start projects that should provide a total production capacity of about 0.35 mbd: Shell’s Bijupira-Salema project (0.05 mbd), BC-10 project (0.1 mbd); Chevron’s Frade project (0.1 mbd); StatoilHydro’s Peregrino field (0.1 mbd).

Then there are the sub-salt fields.  The Tupi field, discovered in 2006, is alone estimated to have 5-8 bbs of recoverable reserves oil and natural gas. Oil and gas recovery from Tupi, and similar sized sub-salt fields, will be very challenging however, as these reserves occur in a subsalt zone that average 18,000 feet below the ocean surface.  This will require the construction of multiple FPSO platforms and advanced technology to recover the oil.  Nevertheless, the potential is there—estimates of the recoverable oil and natural gas reserves in the entire sub-salt fields are +50 bbs of oil equivalents.   This would increase Brazil’s proven petroleum reserves from 13 bbs to over 60 bbs.

Brazils plans for the coming decade to double its petroleum production are very ambitious indeed:

State-run Petrobras oil giant unveiled the spending plans as Chief Executive Officer Sergio Gabrielli set out the company's strategy to build capacity in the run-up to 2020, when Brazil will have doubled its production to 5.4 million barrels a day from 2.7 million barrels a day at present. 


The EIA’s country analysis brief, however, sounds a more cautious note: 

In large part due to this sizable slate of recent expansions, EIA expects that Brazil’s total oil production could reach 2.81 million bbl/d in 2010. This forecast takes into account the above-mentioned projects and an estimate for decline rates at Brazil’s older, mature fields. This could make Brazil one of the largest sources of new, non-OPEC oil supply growth. However, recent experience has shown that forecasts of non-OPEC supply growth have generally been over-optimistic, so there is considerable downside risk to this forecast. Such risks include larger decline rates at mature fields and delays to project schedules.

Even past estimates by Petrobras have projected more modest increases in crude oil production:

Brazil's state oil company, Petrobras (PBR.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), projects its crude output in Brazil should reach 2.37 million barrels per day in 2011, up a steep 27 percent from this year's planned 1.86 million bpd, and then rise to 2.81 million bpd by 2015.

             
Brazil’s “other liquid”—ethanol
No discussion of Brazil’s present and potential liquid petroleum production would be complete without considering ethanol production from sugarcane.  As noted in the EIA country analysis brief, Brazil is the second largest producer of ethanol, and the world’s largest exporter. 

Brazil has aggressively moved towards the use of flex-fuel vehicles that can run on 100 percent ethanol or an ethanol-gasoline mixture.  All gasoline in Brazil contains 20-25 percent ethanol, and, about 90% of all new cars sold in Brazil are flex-fuel vehicles.  Despite this strong move toward using ethanol as a major liquid transport fuel, Brazil’s growing domestic ethanol production exceed domestic consumption and it seems likely that ethanol exports will increase in the future. Presently, as the largest ethanol exporter in the world, Brazil holds over 90 percent of the global export market.

Brazil’s present ethanol production is the result of a decades-old plan:

Brazil's military dictatorship launched the national ethanol program in 1975, when about 90 percent of its fuel consumption depended on foreign oil. The government offered subsidies to sugar cane growers and forced service stations in every town of at least 1,500 people to install ethanol pumps. By the early 1980s, almost all new cars sold in Brazil ran on 100 percent ethanol.


At present, Brazil’s ethanol exports to the USA are modest at 0.013 mbd in 2008, according to the EIA country analysis brief.  This is due at least in part to US-imposed import tariffs designed to protect US farmers, producing corn-based ethanol, from the likely decline in prices if Brazil could freely export to the USA without a duty fee and a 54 cent/G tariff being imposed (see e.g., Sugar cane ethanol's not-so-sweet future).

An end-around the duty fee and tariff has been exploited by Caribbean countries that import ethanol from Brazil, slightly process the ethanol (from hydrated to anhydrous) and then re-exporting the ethanol to the USA for profit.  Under the Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI), the 2.5% duty and 54 cent/G is waived.  But this still doesn’t avoid the US import quota of 7% of U.S. ethanol consumption (see Ethanol fuel in Brazil).
The tariff was set to expire as the end of 2010, but Congress extended it

A little-noticed provision of the law extends ethanol tax credits ($.45 per gallon, plus a bonus for small producers) and tariffs on ethanol imports ($.54 per gallon), previously set to expire at the end of 2010. Should the rest of us also celebrate? I think not.


However, even if Brazil’s ethanol exports (directly or indirectly through the Caribbean) are limited—the domestic ethanol use helps make more crude oil available for export, as would more ethanol exports to Japan, China or Europe would potentially make more crude oil available for export to the USA. 

The ERoEI of sugar cane based ethanol is much higher than corn based ethanol
We have all heard by now about the poor energy return on energy invested (ERoEI) for ethanol produced from corn, which at best, has a ratio of slightly about 1:1.  This does not appear to be the case for ethanol produced from sugar cane, however:

Let’s turn next to trade and comparative advantage. In the case of ethanol, comparative advantage belongs, hands down, to sugarcane-based ethanol from Brazil. The net energy yield from sugarcane-based Brazilian ethanol is about 8:1, compared to barely more than, or perhaps less than, 1:1 for the U.S. corn-based product. 


The sustainability of Brazilian ethanol appears for the most part to be as advertised. The indications are that the EROEI is at least 8.3, which would actually make it better than for gasoline.

Sugar cane based ethanol production has the potential to be expanded about 7x
The Brazilian government has set a zoning limit on the amount of agricultural land that can be used for sugarcane cultivation:

Nowadays, sugarcane cultivation uses less than 1% of the Brazilian lands (7.8 million hectares). Projections of the Ministry of Agriculture indicate that if Brazilian production doubles till 2017, at most 1.7% of the lands will be used.

The group of restrictions regarding the environment, economy, society, climate risks, and soil conditions, set by ZAE Cana, guides the expansion of Sugarcane in 7.5% of the Brazilian lands (64.7 million hectares). According to the new criteria, 92.5% of the national territory is not suitable for sugarcane plantation.


If presently 1% of the land is being used and up to 7.5% could be used, then assuming a constant yield of sugarcane, ethanol production could potentially be increased about 7.5 times over present projection.

Brazil’s export trend to the USA
As Brazil is not a net petroleum exporter, I cannot do has I have in the past for other countries and look at Brazilian exports to the USA as a percentage of its total net exports.  Instead, I plotted the petroleum exports to the USA since the early 90s, as reported in “Total Exports” versus Brazil’s total petroleum production (reported by the EIA):
Since a low percentage of 0.5%, Brazil’s exports to the USA have steadily increased to 12% in 2009.  Linear regression analysis of the data from 1997-2009 gives an r2 = 0.96, slope 0.88%/yr.  If the linear trend continuous then by 2030 Brazil would be exporting 30% of its gross production to the USA.  I think that is unrealistic, but the trend certainly doesn’t suggest any downturn in exports to the USA.  However I think that strong competition for Brazil’s oil from China, India, Europe and others will stop the upward trend. 

As a compromise between applying this linear trend versus or a 5-year aver age, for the export analysis to follow, I have assumed that the percentage of Brazil’s exports to the USA will continue at its 2009 percentage (12%) going forward.   

Non-linear least squares (NLLS) analysis of total petroleum production
For most of my past analysis of other countries I have used of the petroleum production data for 1965-2009 reported in the BP statistical review.   However, for Brazil the BP data seriously underestimates Brazil’s total production because it does not consider that “other liquid,” ethanol.  To account for this, I have used the 1980-2009 data presented in the EIA’s Brazil Energy Profile. 

Figure 1 below compares the total petroleum production reported by BP and the EIA and the respective NLLS best fits to these data using the Hubbert Equation.  Also shown are some of Petrobras’ stated future production rate expectations.

It is apparent that the EIA total production numbers are higher than the BP numbers (which report crude oil and NGL production), and, that the Hubbert Equation fits are quite different as well.  The Hubbert Equation fits the BP production data fairly well (light blue solid line: best parameters: “a” = 0.082; Q∞ = 59.46; Qo = 0.36) and the prediction curves lines up pretty well with Petrobras’ earlier crude oil production estimates for 2011 and 2015. 

The fit  “blows up” when I attempted to fit the Hubbert equation to the EIA total production data (which reports crude oil, LPG, refinery gains and “other liquids”) as indicated by the exponentially shaped best-fit curve with an absurdly high Q∞ (dark blue solid line: best parameters: “a” = 0.0613; Q∞ = 106; Qo = 2.52). 

The EIA glossary defines Refinery Processing Gain (RG) as “[t]he amount by which the total volume of refinery output is greater than the total volume of refinery input for a given period of time. The processing gain arises when crude oil and other hydrocarbons are processed into petroleum products that are, on average, less dense than the input.”  Generally this is a small number amounting to 2-6% of the total petroluem production. 

The EIA glossary defines Liquefied Petroleum Gases (LPG) as “hydrogen-based gases derived from crude oil refining or natural gas fractionation. They include ethane, ethylene, propane, propylene, normal butane, butylene, isobutane, and isobutylene. For convenience of transportation, these gases are liquefied through pressurization.”  It is apparent that LPG is substantially the same as what the BP statistical review calls NGLs (the liquid content of natural gas where this is recovered separately).   I can tell this is the case, because the sum of the EIA’s crude oil plus LPG is nearly identical to the total production number reported in the BP statistical review.  

There is no entry in the glossary  for “other liquids,” but, in the glossary of the Dec 2010 International Petroleum Monthly (IPM), this was defined as “Biodiesel, ethanol, liquids produced from coal and oil shale, non-oil inputs to methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE), Orimulsion, and other hydrocarbons.”  I think that for Brazil, “other liquids” mainly refers to ethanol. 

The Hubbert equation best fit actually comes pretty close to the goal of 5.4 mbd announced by Petrobras’ CEO Sergio Gabrielli, so I can’t say that this is a ridiculously high prediction curve.  However, the yearly increase in the production rate would have to be a lot larger than 6.1%/yr, as implied by the best fit value of the rate constant “a,” if a more reasonable value for Q∞ is assumed. 

This is illustrated by the dashed line shown in Figure 1, which presents the Hubbert equation fit to only the 2005-2010 data with the constraint that production hits 1.97 bbs/yr (5.4 mbd) in 2020, and that Q∞ equals 60 bbs.  Now, the best fit value “a” equals 0.134, implying that a year-over-year increase of 13.3% in the production rate would be needed to get to this doubling in production compared to present rates.  Given the complexities of extracting oils from thousands of feet below the ocean, however, this seems like an unrealistic goal.

Modified Hubbert Equation fit to Brazil’s “other liquid”
I turned to my modified Hubbert Equation (good old equation 9, from part 7 of my earlier series of articles) in an effort to tease some more realistic predictions from the EIA production data.  The EIA does separately report the component parts of total production: crude oil, LPG, RG and “other liquid” production.  Perusal of these data suggested that it is the “other liquids” component of production that has growing exponentially recently.   This is illustrated in Figure 2 below, which shows “other liquids” (i.e., ethanol) production reported by the EIA.



It is apparent that after reaching a peak in production in about 1990, ethanol production declined for a few years and then just took off like a rocket for the later half of the 1990s and throughout the 2000s. 

Figure 2 shows the best fit of the Hubbert equation to the 1980-1994 range of data (solid purple line: best fit parameters “a” = 0.24; Q∞ = 1.34; Qo = 0.12) suggesting a 24%/yr increase in ethanol production through this period—that’s pretty impressive, but, it is starting from a very small production rate in 1980. 

Figure 2 further shows the best fit of the modified Hubbert Equation to the 1995-2010 range of data with the values of “a” Q∞ and Qo fixed to their best fit values from the Hubbert fit to the 1980-1994 range, but fcq (yearly fractional change in Q) allowed to vary (fca fixed to 1).  The best fit value for fcq equals 1.065.  The Srss for the best fit value with fca (fractional change in “a”) varied (fcq fixed to 1) for 1995-2010 plus the best fit of the Hubbert equation for 1980-1994 was significantly better than the Hubbert equation fit to the full range of data (F-test p<0.0001).  The Srss for the best fit value with fca (fractional change in “a”) varied (fcq fixed to 1) was an order-of-magnitude larger than the Srss obtained with fca varied, and, varying both fca and fcq did not result in a significantly better fit (F-test p<.1).

The fcq value obtained from the best fit to the modified Hubbert equation is consistent with there being a yearly 6.5% increase in the Q∞, which in this case, is the total recoverable ethanol. 

Putting it all together—predicting Brazil’s petroleum production
I also fit the Hubbert equation to the sum of Brazil’s other petroleum sources as reported by the EIA, that is, the sum of crude oil, PGL, and RG.  Figure 3 shows this data (open circles) and the best fit to the data (long dashes: best fit parameters: “a” = 0.0816; Q∞ = 57.92; Qo = 1.31).


The best parameters are real close to the best parameters obtain from the fit the data presented in the BP statistical review (shown in Figure 1 and discussed above), but not identical, because the EIA data refinery gains and the BP data doesn’t include this.  Like the fit to the BP data, however, the production rate is predicted to top out at ~1.2 bbs/yr in 2025 and then decline thereafter.  The Q∞ value of 58 bbs is plausible if the sub-salt fields are added to the known reserves.  If this trend held it would make Brazil a major petroleum producer in the 2020s.  For instance, if this production trend and Saudi Arabia’s production were to continue as predicted then Brazil’s predicted production, for these non-ethanol sources, in 2025 would be just slightly below Saudi Arabia’ predicted production (1.4 bbs/yr). 

Also reproduced in Figure 3, for reference, is the production data for that “other liquid”—ethanol and the Hubbert equation and modifed Hubbert equation best fits (previously presented in Figure 2). 

It apparent, that at present, ethanol production (0.2 bbs/yr) is about four times smaller than the total production from Crude, LPG and RG.  However if these trends continued, by about 2038, ethanol production would actually exceed these other petroleum sources.   Is that even possible?  

Well, yes I think that it is.  Recall that the Brazil’s sugarcane zoning implies that about 7.5 times more land could be used than at present.  Potentially therefore, the present rate of ethanol production of 0.2 bbs/yr could be expanded to 1.5 bbs/yr.  That would be more than enough to exceed the production rates expected from the other petroleum sources.  And, by the mid-2030s I suspect that Brazil will have very strong financial incentive to do just that, if they can.

Finally, Figure 3 shows the sum of the production rates from Crude, LPG and RG and ethanol production.  The continued upward trend in production after 2025 declines somewhat, but still increases.  Of course, this is due the predicted increase in ethanol production.  Even if ethanol production were to increase at half the rate as projected in Figure 3, that would still be enough to flatten out Brazils total production as production rate from the conventional sources go into decline after 2025. 

Overall therefore, prospects look pretty good that Brazil has the potential to become a major net petroleum exporter for next few decades at least—provided that they don’t use it all themselves that is.

Non-linear least squares (NLLS) analysis of total petroleum consumption
Figure 4 shows the consumption data for 1965-2009 reported in the BP statistical review (open circles) and the production data for 1980-2009 reported in the EIA.  Like the production data, the number from these two sources are close but not identical to each other.  I can’t see what the reason for the difference is. 



Also shown are the best fits two these two data sets using the Hubbert equation.  The best fit parameters to the EIA data (solid line: “a” = 0.065; Q∞ = 54.1; Qo = 5.61) are very similar to the BP best fit parameters (dashed line: “a” = 0.060; Q∞ = 54.6; Qo = 3.16), except for Qo (because one data set starts at 1965 and the other starts at 1980).  The EIA and BP best fit curve predict a peak in consumption in about 2013 and 2014, respectively.  The annual rates of increase in production are estimated to be 6.5%/yr and 6.0%/yr, respectively.  The estimated total petroleum consumed at ~54 bbs is just slightly under the estimates of total petroleum produced (58 and 59 bbs, for the EIA and BP data respectively).

Therefore for the export land model analysis to follow it would not matter much which of these curves were used, but since I have used the EIA data for production, I will stick with the EIA data for consumption.

Predicting future trends in Brazilian petroleum exports
Figure 5 shows the EIA production and consumption data from 1980-2010, the best fits obtained using the Hubbert equation analysis of the consumption data and the sum of the Hubbert equation and modified Hubbert equation fits to the production data.



The predicted export curve (solid green line) is calculated based on the difference between the production and the consumption curves shown in the figure.  Additionally, I show the estimated “measured” export data from 1980-2009 (i.e., the BP statistical review reported production minus the EIA reported consumption).  Because the consumption rate has exceeded production the measured net exports are actually negative until 2007, goes negative in 2008 and then slightly positive in 2009.  The prediction curve suggests ever upward exports as domestic consumption peaks and declines in the early 2010s but production continues to increase, spurred on by increases in both convention petroleum and ethanol production until 2025, and continued increases in ethanol production at least through 2040.

Impact on USA
Figure 6 reproduces the USA production and consumption data and predicted trends, plus the data from the previously discussed top-nine petroleum exporters to the USA measured and predicted future exports, as presented in my previous articles in this series. 

The lime green line shows the addition of Brazils exportable petroleum to the USA, which equals the predicted total production (i.e., the solid blue line shown in Figure 4) multiplied by 0.12, corresponding to the percentage of Brazilian total production sent to the USA in 2009.

The lime green circles show my estimate of the last past few years of Brazils measured exports to the USA based on the best fit to the EIA production data and the percentages of USA exports, derived from the EIA data (using the linear regression analysis slope and intercept of the 1994-2010 data shown in the above graph, “Percent of Brazil's total production (EIA) exported to USA”).


Based on the predicted export trend, Brazil’s exports to the USA by 2015 are predicted to equal about 0.15 bbs/yr and 0.17 bbs/yr by 2020. That is 131% and 155%, respectively, of Brazils’s estimated exports to the USA in 2009 (0.111 bbs/yr). This upward trend continues through 2030 and beyond. If these trends are accurate, by 2025 Brazil will be third, only behind Canada and Iraq, as the largest important export source to the USA.

Well, at last I have completed my analysis of production and consumption trends for the USA and its top ten import sources .  It is time now to put it all together and apply this to an Export-land model analysis for the USA, and ponder the implications, which is what I will be doing for the next few posts. 





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