Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
European Tech Sovereignty
30JUN

Diesel crack near $46 stays bid

2 min read
17:31UTC

The European diesel crack held near $46 a barrel through June, roughly double the seasonal norm, even as US and Gulf inventories refilled, because Regulation 833/2014 bars EU buyers from Russian and Iranian diesel.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Regulation 833/2014 keeps Europe's diesel crack near $46 even as US and Gulf stocks refill.

The European Diesel Crack held near $46 a barrel through June on OPIS (a US oil price-reporting agency) and EIA data, roughly double the seasonal norm and barely off two-year highs, even as the physical barrel loosened on both sides of Suez. The crack is the spread between European gasoil futures and crude, the margin a refiner earns turning one into the other, and it has not repriced the rebuilds now showing in US and Gulf tanks. 1

Regulation 833/2014 bars EU buyers from Russian and Iranian diesel, so the European pool cannot draw on the cheapest nearby barrels however loose the global balance. That exclusion has kept the crack bid. ARA gasoil sat near a 2.5-year low of 13.56mb with Saudi supply down to 12% of imports , and ARA jet hit a six-year low on 22 June .

If the US and Fujairah rebuilds hold and ARA stocks follow them lower, the crack is the lagging leg and compression becomes the trade. If exclusion keeps the European pool starved, the crack stays bid and the loosening never reaches the margin. Both scenarios turn on sanctions plumbing, not the global balance.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Europe's diesel crack, the refining profit margin on turning crude oil into diesel, held near $46 a barrel through June, roughly double the normal level for this time of year. Everywhere else in the world, diesel supplies have been easing, in the US and at the Fujairah storage hub, for instance, which would normally bring this margin down. It hasn't, because European Union rules ban buying the cheapest diesel, from Russia and Iran, so Europe can't tap into that global loosening the way other regions can.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Regulation 833/2014 creates a legal gap rather than a physical shortage: it bars EU buyers from the cheapest available marginal diesel, Russian and Iranian barrels, regardless of how loose the global balance gets elsewhere, so the European pool prices off exclusion rather than off the worldwide balance the US and Fujairah data reflect.

The gap compounds with a shrinking substitute base: ARA gasoil stocks sit near a 2.5-year low and Saudi Arabia's share of ARA imports has fallen to 12% from the 33-37% of prior weeks, so even the legal, non-excluded replacement barrels are becoming scarcer just as the crack needs them most.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    As long as the crack stays elevated, European refiners with spare distillate-yield capacity capture outsized margins relative to peers in the US and Asia.

  • Risk

    If the EU's draft 21st sanctions package extends restrictions on shadow-fleet service providers, the substitute barrels now narrowing the gap could face fresh shipping friction, keeping the crack elevated for longer.

First Reported In

Update #13 · Distillate deficit eases; the crack won't

US Energy Information Administration· 3 Jul 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
United States (Google/Alphabet)
United States (Google/Alphabet)
Alphabet lost its final Android appeal on 2 July with no further court to hear it, a result its Computer and Communications Industry Association allies frame as precedent, not deterrence, since the €4.1bn fine changed nothing about Google's Play Store terms across eight years of litigation.
UK Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
UK Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
DSIT opened its £96m second Sovereign AI wave on 3 July, switching from April's equity stakes to fixed-price contracts because Britain has no domestic hyperscaler or Bpifrance-style lender to fund capacity another way. It is betting on buying outcomes it controls alone rather than joining an EU-wide framework.
German federal government
German federal government
Berlin backed both German deliverables this week, Infineon's fab and Aleph Alpha's merger, but is finding one far harder to close than the other. It wants enforceable protective rights inside Cohere's cap table before the merger closes, a legal instrument the Bundeskartellamt has no filing to review yet.
European Commission
European Commission
The Commission banked a clean CJEU win on the eight-year Android case on 2 July, removing Google's last comparator argument before President von der Leyen rules on the far larger DMA self-preferencing fine due 27 July. Brussels treats Infineon's early Dresden delivery as proof the Chips Act mechanism works, at the node Europe already led.
Bruegel (EU industry sceptics)
Bruegel (EU industry sceptics)
Bruegel economist Mario Mariniello argued the EU sovereignty package mimics US and Chinese strategy while EU cloud providers hold roughly 15% of their home market; using nationality as a proxy for security without fixing the underlying capital and energy gaps that drive the dependency creates €86bn of migration cost without the security benefit it is sold as delivering.
France
France
France published a joint sovereignty definition with Germany at VivaTech and mobilised €13bn under Tibi Phase 3, placing SAP's partnership with Mistral as the working proof that a German enterprise-software giant running a French sovereign model inside public administration is what digital sovereignty looks like in practice.