Edmonton Journal

Pipelines add room on unrelentin­g demand for Canadian product

- ROBERT TUTTLE

CALGARY U.S. refiners want more Canadian oil, and pipeline companies are finding ways to get it to them.

Companies are adding space to their congested oil export pipelines from Canada even as plans for bigger expansions and new lines face delays. TC Energy Corp. will offer as much as 50,000 barrels a day of new capacity on its Keystone pipeline as early as next year by using chemicals, called drag resistance agents, to ease flows thorough the system.

That “will allow TC Energy to respond to the demand for additional transporta­tion capacity for crude oil from western Canada to the U.S. Gulf Coast,” Jamie Harding, a spokesman for the company, said in an email.

Enbridge Inc., operator of the largest oil pipeline system, is using similar methods to add about 135,000 barrels a day of extra capacity to its system by early next year. The company begins an open season Friday, allowing shippers to sign up for secure, contracted space on the Enbridge main line system starting in July 2021.

Since June, flows on Enbridge’s Mainline are up 213,000 barrels a day from a year earlier, said Tim Pickering, founder and chief investment officer of Auspice Capital Advisors in Calgary. Rail exports are also ramping up and are forecast to reach half a million barrels a day, Tim Mckay, present of Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., said Thursday.

“When you put the Enbridge main line and increased rail, that’s what’s bringing in differenti­als” between heavy Canadian crude and WTI futures, Pickering said.

Heavy Canadian crude for January was less than US$20 a barrel below to West Texas Intermedia­te futures Wednesday versus almost US$22 a month ago, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Enbridge has optimized its pipeline system to create about 220,000 barrels a day of new capacity over the past “couple of years,” Jesse Semko, a spokesman for the company, said in an email.

Canadian oil producers have been struggling to export their crude for more than a year after pipelines filled to capacity, sending the price of heavy Western Canadian Select crude to a US$50 discount to futures last October. The situation became dire enough that Alberta’s government imposed mandatory limits on the largest suppliers.

Prices are strengthen­ing even after Enbridge announced that its Line 3 pipeline expansion won’t start operation until late next year, about 12 months behind schedule, a situation that could prompt an extension of the production limits into 2020. At the same time, new low-sulphur ship fuel rules that go into force next year threaten to cut demand for the heavy, high-sulphur grades of crude produced in Canada.

 ?? DANIEL ACKER/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Pipeline operators are finding innovative ways to increase capacity, like using chemicals to ease flows to the system.
DANIEL ACKER/BLOOMBERG FILES Pipeline operators are finding innovative ways to increase capacity, like using chemicals to ease flows to the system.

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