December 19, 2025
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When logistics and refineries overpower the exchange

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Energy markets are often portrayed as arenas where prices are discovered on exchanges, driven by transparent bids and offers. In reality, particularly during periods of stress, physical logistics and industrial constraints can dominate price formation, rendering exchange signals secondary. Nowhere is this more evident than in the interaction between oil logistics, refinery operations, and downstream energy markets.

Logistics impose hard limits that financial markets cannot arbitrage away. Tanker availability, port congestion, pipeline capacity, and storage constraints define what is physically possible, regardless of price signals. When these constraints tighten, markets can clear at prices that appear irrational when viewed solely through the lens of supply and demand curves. The exchange reflects scarcity, but the cause lies in infrastructure rather than fundamentals.

Refineries sit at the centre of this dynamic. Their decisions determine the availability of refined products that underpin transport, shipping, and backup power generation. Refinery outages, whether planned or unplanned, can remove significant volumes from the market instantly. The resulting imbalance is not easily corrected by imports if logistics are constrained. Prices adjust sharply, not because demand has surged, but because supply cannot reach where it is needed in time.

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In South-East Europe, these effects are magnified by structural factors. The region relies on a limited number of refineries and transit routes, making it vulnerable to disruptions. A single outage can alter regional balances, forcing imports over longer distances and at higher cost. Freight rates rise, delivery times extend, and energy-intensive industries face sudden cost increases. These pressures spill over into gas and electricity markets as industrial demand patterns shift.

The interaction with LNG logistics further amplifies the impact. LNG shipping competes for tanker availability with other energy cargoes, and its economics are sensitive to freight costs. When logistics tighten due to oil-related disruptions, LNG netbacks deteriorate, potentially diverting cargoes away from Europe. Gas prices respond, and electricity markets follow. In such scenarios, power prices may spike even if local generation capacity appears sufficient, because fuel logistics have become the binding constraint.

Exchange-based signals struggle to capture these realities in advance. Futures markets price expectations, but they cannot resolve physical bottlenecks. When logistics dominate, spot markets can decouple sharply from forwards, and price volatility increases. Participants relying solely on financial indicators may be caught off guard, as the true driver of prices lies outside the exchange.

Operational decisions during these periods are often binary rather than marginal. A refinery either runs or it does not. A tanker either arrives on time or it does not. These discontinuities create price jumps rather than smooth adjustments. In an integrated energy system, such jumps propagate quickly, affecting multiple fuels and regions simultaneously.

For policymakers and regulators, this presents a challenge. Market interventions aimed at smoothing prices may fail if physical constraints are the root cause. Releasing strategic reserves or adjusting market rules cannot immediately create logistics capacity or repair a refinery. Recognising when the exchange is being overpowered by physical realities is crucial for effective response.

South-East Europe’s experience underscores the importance of infrastructure resilience. The region’s exposure to logistics-driven shocks reflects not market failure, but physical limitation. As energy systems become more interconnected and reliant on global supply chains, the dominance of logistics during stress periods is likely to increase.

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