Edmonton Journal

Lack of trains leaves terminals with glut of oil

Rail firms slow to invest in long-term infrastruc­ture with pipelines looming

- ROBERT TUTTLE

Stranded Alberta crude is waiting for trains to take it to U.S. refineries.

A rail terminal near Edmonton that oilsands producer Cenovus Energy Inc. bought for $75 million sits underutili­zed just when it’s most needed. The Bruderheim crude-by-rail facility is operating below its potential because of a shortage of locomotive­s, the company said last week.

The Cenovus situation isn’t unique. After spending hundreds of millions of dollars building rail terminals able to handle more than one million barrels a day of oil, Canadian crude producers are discoverin­g all the loading capacity in the world isn’t sufficient if rail companies don’t provide enough locomotive­s, conductors and track space to transport the oil.

“Everyone kind of fell into the train of thought, that when they needed the rail resources from the rail companies that they would be there,” said Genscape Inc. analyst Mike Walls. “It’s been frustratin­g for crude-by-rail shippers.”

Heavy Western Canadian Select, a crude benchmark, has traded more than $20 a barrel below West Texas Intermedia­te since Dec. 8 after TransCanad­a Corp.’s Keystone pipeline shut down and then resumed operation at reduced pressure following an oil spill. The shutdown came as Suncor Energy Inc.’s new Fort Hills oilsands mine was set to begin ramping up. The steep discount for the Canadian crude pushed Cenovus to curtail production.

Western Canadian crude production will exceed the pipeline capacity to carry it away by 338,000 barrels a day by the end of the year, about three times more than December 2017, according to Genscape. Canada’s railroad companies have been slow to respond as they struggle with a harsh winter and large numbers of grain shipments.

The USD Group LLC’s terminal in Hardisty, Cenovus’ Bruderheim terminal and the Kinder Morgan Inc./Imperial Oil Ltd. Edmonton terminal are shipping less than one-third of their combined capacity.

Crude shippers began investing in crude-loading terminals early this decade, when oil prices were higher and pipelines weren’t keeping pace with growing production. Producers cut rail shipments when oil plunged in 2014 and pipeline capacity opened up. Now, with oil prices recovering and pipeline space again limited, rail companies, once burned, are now demanding longer-term commitment­s.

Canadian National Railway Co. now expects a minimum 12-month agreement from oil shippers, JeanJacque­s Ruest, interim chief executive, said at a news conference March 14.

Oil companies “would get married with pipelines, but they only date the railroad,” he said.

Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. said the surge in crude demand came eight to 10 months earlier than anticipate­d and, in a few years, newly approved pipelines will carry the crude moved by rail now, according to a posting on its website.

“It is difficult to justify investing in long-life assets like rail and locomotive­s based on short-term demand.”

Torq Energy Logistics Ltd.’s six terminals in Saskatchew­an and Alberta are transporti­ng about 50,000 barrels a day, below capacity, chief executive Jarrett Zielinski said March 15. Torq has been using its fleet of 275 tanker trucks to carry medium and heavy crude across the U.S. border because of the glut, he said.

USD is working with railroads to reach “full operationa­l capacity ” at its Hardisty terminal by the second quarter, USD spokeswoma­n Meg Martin said in an email. Canadian National has signed take-or-pay agreements that will begin in the second half of the year at a pricing “above capital cost,” Ruest said earlier this month.

“Nearly all” of 130 leased locomotive­s Canadian National secured earlier this year are in service and “we continue to hire hundreds of conductors and are preparing for a record $3.2 billion capital program,” spokesman Patrick Waldron said in an email.

“In the past, I think producers were very cautious or hesitant to make long-term commitment­s to shipping by rail,” Zielinski said. “The current state of affairs has maybe adjusted that position somewhat.”

It is difficult to justify investing in long-life assets like rail and locomotive­s based on shortterm demand

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