- FederPetroli Italia - http://www.federpetroliitalia.org -

BLOOMBERG INTERVIEW – Italy’s Refiners See Permanent Disruption Risk in Long Lockdown

(Bloomberg) –Italy’s refiners risk permanent supply chain disruption if the country’s lockdown runs into June and companies stockpile crude and reduce production, industry lobby FederPetroli Italia said.

With the nation under stringent measures to limit movement and activity since March 11, retail fuel sales have cratered by 85%, according to service station union estimates.

Michele Marsiglia, FederPetroli’s president, said three months is the longest the industry can withstand the current level of slowdown before wide-scale business failures ensue.

“Gas stations, which are largely family businesses, will start going bankrupt,” Marsiglia said. Some parts of the industry’s supply chain, including manufacturers of spare parts for refining systems, are earning just 20% of their normal revenue, he added.

Italy has extended its sweeping containment measures until at least April 13, with a slowdown in fatalities showing that rigorous containment measures may be bearing results.

Essential Business though refineries are among the “essential” businesses able to operate under the lockdown, costs incurred through implementation of safety measures and at-home working could cut further into future margins, Marsiglia said.

Italian refineries are already running surpluses of refined product and reducing production. Rome-based Gruppo API temporarily halted one of its plants until fuel demand recovers, a spokesman said.

Eni SpA, Italy’s biggest energy company, has cut operations at refineries by as much as 40% a spokeswoman said.

“The impression in the industry is that it will never be the same again,” Dario Scaffardi, chief executive officer of Sardinia-based Saras SpA, Italy’s biggest refiner, said in an interview. “If there continues to be tension on crude and low demand, this will compress margins.”

Under virus-based restrictions “everyone is stockpiling and the market is stuck,” he said.

An early end to the lockdown, before bankruptcies wipe companies out, could resolve the industry impasse, Marsiglia said. “This is not a consumer crisis but entirely linked to the virus,” he said.

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