Lethbridge Herald

Crude-by-rail may double: IEA

IEA SAYS SHIPMENTS TO MORE THAN DOUBLE TO 390,000 BARRELS A DAY

- Ian Bickis THE CANADIAN PRESS — CALGARY

Crude-by-rail shipments could more than double over the next two years from historic highs as a lack of pipeline capacity forces producers to look to alternativ­es, said the Internatio­nal Energy Agency Monday.

The Paris-based IEA forecasts in its latest oil markets report that crude-by-rail exports will grow from 150,000 barrels a day in late 2017 to 250,000 barrels a day this year and then to 390,000 barrels a day in 2019.

“Crude by rail exports are likely to enjoy a renaissanc­e,” said the IEA, as at the end of 2017 oil available for export was 310,000 barrels a day higher than the take away pipeline capacity.

With oilsands production expected to keep growing, crude-by-rail shipments could peak as high as 590,000 barrels a day in 2019 if producers don’t resort to crude storage in peak months, the IEA said.

The shipments are significan­tly higher than the current record of 179,000 barrels a day reached in September 2014 before oil prices collapsed.

The increase in shipments comes after an increase in railway incidents in 2017, including a 21 per cent jump in accidents from a year earlier and the number of dangerous goods leaks increasing from two to five.

The IEA says rail shipments are expected to return to around the 170,000-barrel-aday level in 2020 assuming Enbridge Inc. replaces its Line 3 pipeline and adds capacity elsewhere on its Mainline pipeline system.

The Line 3 replacemen­t, however, faces significan­t opposition in Minnesota and the company isn’t expected to hear on its environmen­tal approval in the state until this summer.

The export market will also still be constraine­d even with Enbridge’s expected 450,000 barrels a day of expansion, but the IEA raised doubts that the capacity additions from Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain and TransCanad­a’s Keystone XL pipeline projects will actually get built.

“We must acknowledg­e the substantia­l risks that those upgrades will be delayed or even cancelled, possibly due to legal action.”

The agency said the pipeline constraint­s have increased the forward discount for Canadian production, adding US$3.75 a barrel in 2018 and US$2 a barrel in 2019 to the forward differenti­al curve between Western Canadian Select and WTI since its last report a year ago.

The lack of export space has helped contribute to the sell-off of oilsands assets from Shell, ConocoPhil­lips and Marathon Oil and the lack of new developmen­t approvals, said the IEA.

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