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Demand for jet fuel grows in March and April

Demand for jet fuel grew in March and April, according to information from the US Energy Information Administration (EIA).

First of all, the number of passengers traveling by air in the United States has increased in recent weeks, which may be the result of normal seasonal increases, the reduction of Covid-19 restrictions and the increase in rates of vaccination.

Overall, air travel passenger levels serve as a leading barometer of jet fuel demand, which rose steadily in late March and early April.

According to the EIA, the increase in U.S. air traffic is likely to continue through the rest of the year as more people get vaccinated and U.S. travelers become more comfortable with air travel.

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) tracks and publishes the number of passengers moving through TSA airport checkpoints on a daily basis, estimating how many people fly into the United States each day.

Thus, in February 2020, just before responses to the pandemic resulted in substantial reductions in air travel, the TSA processed an average of 2.2 million air passengers per day.

However, in April 2020, when the impact on air travel peaked, the TSA passenger rate dropped to 0.1 million passengers per day.

Jet fuel

Then gradually, the TSA passenger flow increased from April to July 2020, but from August 2020 to February 2021, the passenger flow was relatively flat, remaining between 0.7 million passengers per day and 0.9 million passengers per day.

In March 2021, TSA’s average daily passenger throughput reached 1.2 million, the highest monthly average throughput since the onset of the pandemic.

Passenger volume in April 2021 has continued to increase, averaging 1.4 million passengers per day as of April 20.

According to the EIA’s Weekly Oil Status Report (WPSR), the four-week average demand for jet fuel (measured as product supplied) was 1.3 million barrels per day (b / d) on April 9 and April 16, 2021, an increase of 0.2 million barrels per day compared to the four-week average on March 26.

In contrast, the four-week average for March 26, 2021 was 0.1 million b / d lower than the four-week average for February 26, 2021.

Demand for jet fuel, as reported in the WPSR, may appear to be lagging behind increases in passenger travel, possibly because airports are sometimes based on on-site jet fuel inventories, which it is considered secondary storage and does not count in WPSR inventories.

As airports move to recharge their on-site capacity, they turn to primary storage sites like refineries or bulk terminals.

 

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