National Post

Finally, accurate data for oil by rail

50-fold jump raises safety questions

- John Kemp in London

More than one million barrels of crude oil move by train across the United States every day, according to data published for the first time by the government on Tuesday.

The volume of c r ude shipped by rail has increased more than 50-fold in five years, from just 630,000 barrels in January 2010 to 33.7 million barrels in January 2015, the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA) revealed in its first monthly report on movements of oil by rail

Until now, informatio­n on oil shipments has been incomplete, partly confidenti­al and scattered across a number of sources. The Associatio­n of American Railroads, individual railway companies, and the federal government’s Sur- face Transporta­tion Board, which regulates freight rates, have all published limited data on shipments.

The EIA has now brought together the confidenti­al data from the U.S. Surface Transporta­tion Board and Canada’s National Energy Board as well as its own informatio­n on production and stocks in each part of the United States, to produce the first comprehens­ive picture of crude-by-rail movements.

The data underscore how rapidly the modern oil-by-rail business has grown. Shipments rose from almost zero in 2008 to hit one million barrels per day (bpd) for the first time in the current boom in April 2014.

Rail shipments are running at the highest level since the Second World War, when oil was shifted from tankers to railcars to avoid being sunk by submarines.

Railways have become an essential part of the American energy revolution. Without the massive unit trains hauling 100 tank cars or more loaded with crude from the shale fields to refineries, U.S. crude production could not have grown so quickly over the past five years.

According to the EIA, railways moved 10% of all U.S. oil production in January 2015, and 40% of production from states in the Midwest such as North Dakota, Colorado and Wyoming.

The main consumers were refineries in Pennsylvan­ia, New Jersey and Delaware, which accounted for almost half of the oil shipped by rail at the start of this year.

Crude-by-rail has become essential to East Coast refiners. Railways delivered almost half the crude processed by East Coast refineries at the start of 2015, according to an analysis of EIA data.

Smaller quantities of oil were delivered to refineries in California and on the Gulf Coast in Texas and Louisiana, where crude-by-rail is more marginal to refinery operations.

The surge in crude-by-rail explains why both the railways and oil shippers were slow to appreciate the risks involved in carrying large volumes of oil in unit trains. Because so little oil was transporte­d by rail prior to 2011 or even 2012, there was not much statistica­l infor- mation on the risks involved in carrying oil in unit trains.

The risk of derailment­s and train fires was always present but hidden and not appreciate­d because there were so few crude-carrying trains.

The danger has only become apparent when the size of the business was scaled up by more than an order of magnitude. It is a familiar problem with new technologi­es or technologi­es that undergo rapid growth.

But crude-by-rail has become so central to the U.S. oil business that the industry has struggled to formulate an appropriat­e safety response — even as the risks have become increasing­ly evident following a string of devastatin­g train fires.

The industry is torn between fear of a catastroph­ic train fire in a major urban area that could cause mass casualties and cost billions of dollars in compensati­on and clean up, and the need to fight or delay tougher safety standards that could restrict the availabili­ty of tank cars and disrupt the increasing­ly vital flow of oil by tank car.

Negotiatio­ns between the railways, oil producers, refiners and the U.S. government about new crude-by-rail regulation­s and tank-car safety standards boil down to the question of how to balance the safety imperative of withdrawin­g older and less-secure tank cars as soon as possible against the commercial imperative of keeping them in service for longer to maintain tank-car availabili­ty and keep the oil flowing.

 ?? Jim Wilson / The New York Times ?? An oil train rolls through North Dakota, where the output of shale oil produced by fracking has skyrockete­d. The U.S. has yet to see a disaster like that in Lac-Mégantic, Que., but crude-by-rail shipments have soared with little scrutiny.
Jim Wilson / The New York Times An oil train rolls through North Dakota, where the output of shale oil produced by fracking has skyrockete­d. The U.S. has yet to see a disaster like that in Lac-Mégantic, Que., but crude-by-rail shipments have soared with little scrutiny.

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