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29 Jan 2020 | 10:05 UTC — London
Highlights
More airlines suspending flights to/from China
Single London-Beijing flight takes 80-90 mt of fuel
Jet/kerosene demand around 8 million b/d in 2019
London — Key international airlines including British Airways and Lufthansa said Wednesday they have suspended all direct flights to and from mainland China due to the coronavirus outbreak, further denting spot jet fuel demand.
Other carriers cancelling or reducing flights to China include American Airlines, United Airlines, Swiss International Air Lines and Austrian Airlines.
The virus, which has claimed more than 100 lives, is causing analysts to cut their oil demand growth forecasts for 2020 significantly.
Oil prices have fallen sharply in the past 10 days, with ICE Brent futures dropping more than 8% to around $59/b.
A direct flight from London Heathrow to Beijing Capital International airport, a key Europe-China route, normally takes around 11 hours and estimates gathered by S&P Global Platts indicate it carries 80-90 mt of aviation fuel.
In the first three quarters of 2019, global jet fuel demand averaged 8.01 million b/d, against total oil demand of 100.83 million b/d, according to Platts calculations based on International Energy Agency data.
Demand growth for aviation fuel has recently been heavily concentrated in China, Southeast Asia and South Asia. The IEA estimates Chinese jet/kerosene 2019 demand at 858,000 b/d, up 5.7% on the year.
Concerns on prompt jet fuel demand are beginning to affect the oil products complex.
Jet crack spreads, measuring the price differential between an oil product and the crude from which it is derived, have narrowed amid expectations of lower demand.
The Singapore jet/kero crack spread ended Tuesday at $8.88/b, down from $11.34/b on January 20, Platts data shows. The Rotterdam jet/kero crack ended Tuesday at $12.90/b, down from $14.17/b on January 20. The US Atlantic Coast jet crack ended Tuesday at $12.68/b, down from $14.18/b January 17.
The European jet market remains weighed down by low demand and, with some Europe-China flights already impacted, the outlook is mostly bearish.
One jet fuel trader said if the pace of flight cuts accelerates, it "is quite a big game changer."
"It will be a race to the bottom. The macro environment suggests it's going to fall quite a lot. January is a weak month anyway," he added.
"Aviation is always risk averse. When buying fuel you don't start with price, you start with risk," said another trader.
Platts Analytics is forecasting a drop of demand of 2.6 million b/d in February and 2 million b/d in March, according to its worst-case scenario.
"In best-case, it drops by 900,000 b/d in February and 650,000 b/d in March," it added.
"Crucially, both scenarios are assumed to be short-lived, as this is a common trait with the overwhelming majority of the epidemic outbreaks. Therefore, we assume the impact will fizzle out by June-July," Platts Analytics said.
The Chinese government has extended the Lunar New Year holiday, closing businesses in key provinces and suspending air and rail travel in a bid to contain the virus.
The US Centers for Disease Control expanded its non-essential travel warning to all of China.