COLUMN-U.S. refiners struggle with too much light crude: Kemp

(Repeats June 2 item; no changes to text)

By John Kemp

LONDON, June 2 (Reuters) - Most of the extra oil produced in the United States in the next two years will be light crudes and condensates that domestic refineries will struggle to process - intensifying pressure for at least a partial relaxation of the country's export ban.

U.S. oil production is set to increase by another 2 million barrels per day in 2014-15. More than 60 percent of the forecast growth will consist of light oils with a specific gravity of 40 degrees API or higher, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration ("U.S. crude oil production forecast: analysis of crude types", May 29).

But with imports of competing crudes from West Africa already reduced close to zero, U.S. refineries will be unable to process all this extra oil without enormous investment in equipment.

Distillation towers, furnaces, heat exchangers and downstream conversion units would need expensive and time-consuming overhauls to enable them to handle a higher share of light oil.

"Projects designed to alter the refinery configuration or expand refining capacity take much more time (than building rail links and pipelines). Permitting is generally longer because there is a greater environmental impact and the engineering construction is longer," Valero, the largest refiner in the United States, warned investors in a conference call in March.

"Many refinery projects take two years to permit and can take at least two years to build. If you decide to do something today, it takes four or five years before your investment is operational," the company explained ("Refining technical teach-in call transcript", March 4).

Processing a higher share of light oil would also leave refineries unable to make full use of the expensive coking units installed in the 1990s and 2000s, when they expected to be handling more medium and heavy grades.

Refiners will make another round of changes only if they expect light grades to stay at a significant discount over the long term, which remains unclear. Without investment, refiners will demand even bigger discounts for handling unsuitable domestic crudes. If prices drop low enough, production could be curtailed.

REFINERY CONFIGURATION

Crude is a blend of thousands of different hydrocarbons, ranging from small, light molecules with low boiling points to large, heavy ones that boil at very high temperatures.

Refineries separate raw crude into a series of fractions with similar boiling points by distillation. They then employ various conversion and upgrading processes to alter the proportion in each boiling range and improve the characteristics prior to sale as gasoline, kerosene, heating oil, heavy fuel oil, lubricating oil or bitumen.