Election campaigning will boost fuel use in a nation where oil demand is already growing at the fastest pace in the world.
The
largest democratic exercise on Earth is set to give the oil
market a shot in the arm.
About
875 million Indians will go to polls over the next three months to
elect their leader, dwarfing the 158 million Americans who registered
to vote in the 2016 US residential elections. Before they vote,
they’ll be courted by a slew of competing political parties -- a
process that will boost fuel use in a nation where oil
demand is already growing at the fastest pace in the world.
The
lift will be provided by hordes of party faithful, who traverse
teeming cities and remote villages across the world’s
seventh-largest country in a campaigning frenzy before what’s
expected to be a closely fought election. Their use of motorcycles
and sports utility vehicles at a time when some refineries are closed
for maintenance will support returns from making fuels in Asia over
the next few months, according to a Bloomberg survey of traders who
participate in the market.
“The
election, which coincides with scheduled maintenance, should see
India pull imports of gasoil and gasoline and this usually adds to
bullish sentiment,” said WengInn Chin, a senior oil market analyst
at Facts Global Energy in Singapore. In the lead up to the polls, the
increased consumption is expected to increase gasoline and diesel
demand by as much as 80,000 barrels a day, he said.
That
will be in addition to the nation’s already growing demand for
gasoline and diesel, consumption of which grew by about 75,000
barrels a day and 100,000 barrels a day, respectively, in January.
Demand for liquefied petroleum gas is also surging, with state
refiners seeking to import cargoes of the cooking fuel as the
government tries to keep voter morale high by ensuring rural
households are well supplied.
The
profit from turning crude into diesel reached a two-month high late
last month, and has climbed over 25 percent so far this year.
Refinery maintenance will keep supplies tight in coming months, while
the International Maritime Organization’s new rules on ship fuel
next year will drive the fuel’s demand in the longer term. That’s
set to keep the so-called crack at an average of $14.50 a barrel this
month, according to the Bloomberg survey of traders.
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