National Post

Canada not waiting for U.S. on climate

ENERGY

- Marine Strauss Brian Parkin

• China, Canada and the European Union are joining forces to advance the Paris Agreement while President Donald Trump is still deciding whether the U.S. should stick with the landmark deal on climate change.

Canada’s environmen­t minister Catherine McKenna, EU Climate and Energy Commission­er Miguel Arias Canete and China’s special envoy for climate change Xie Zhenhua met Tuesday in Berlin to discuss climate leadership and how to maintain momentum if the U. S. pulls out of the Paris Agreement. In September, the three will convene a ministeria­l- level meeting in support of the Paris accord, Canete said in an email. The collaborat­ion between the three countries is another sign that the U. S. will become isolated from the rest of the world.

“Even if the volumes involved are small in 2017, OPEC member countries will not appreciate U. S. government policies that plan to add oil to the market at the same time OPEC is trying to do the opposite,” analysts at Barclays said in a recent research note.

Saudi and Russian officials have signalled in recent weeks that OPEC and allies could extend the agreement by nine months through the first quarter of 2018.

The decision to sell the reserves also represents the growing swagger of the U. S. energy industry, which has become a dominant player in world oil markets.

“I do think that it’s yet more evidence that the U. S. is feeling pretty confident about its oil supply situation,” said Sarah Ladislaw, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic & Internatio­nal Studies in Washington.

The timing of the announceme­nt is awkward, as it comes days after U.S. President Donald Trump signed a US$ 110 billion defence deal with Saudi Arabia, in a sign of strategic co-operation with a key ally in the Middle East.

However, the long- term strategy of selling the reserves remains unclear, she says.

“I think the question is whether or not the U. S. has vulnerabil­ities in the global oil market, or within our own domestic system. I think that we’ve probably not adequately discussed that issue.”

Other U.S. presidents have similarly meddled with the country’s strategic reserve base. The Obama administra­tion aimed to raise US$5.1 billion between 2018 and 2025 to cover budget expenses, while former president George W. Bush proposed doubling the reserves in response to high prices.

Trump’s budget proposal needs to pass through U. S. Congress, and is expected to undergo substantia­l changes before it is approved.

“Most of this budget is aspiration­al,” Ladislaw says.

The U. S. Strategic Petrol- eum Reserves ( SPR) were establishe­d in response to the 1973 Arab Oil Embargo, which cut off global oil supplies and caused prices to spike. Then-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger led U. S. efforts to amass the strategic supply as a way to cushion against potential supply shortfalls.

Today the reserves hold 687.7 million barrels of oil in tank farms and undergroun­d salt caverns in Texas and Louisiana. The proposal involves selling 270 million barrels of oil over 10 years above current sales expectatio­ns.

Some analyst question whether the U. S. will be legally able to sell more of its crude reserves due to a stipulatio­n by the Internatio­nal Energy Agency that obligates its members to hold at least 90 days worth of supply in strategic reserve. The IEA was formed in 1974 in direct response to the oil embargo, and was also a result of Kissinger’s efforts to combat market disruption­s.

Michael Cohen, the head of energy markets research at Barclays, says the parameters of that IEA obligation could change due to rising U. S. energy independen­ce.

“The fact that the U. S. is producing a lot more crude than it did in past years makes the storage obligation a little bit lower.”

Oil prices initially fell after news of the proposed sell-off, but analysts don’t expect a significan­t long-term impact as the sales amount to only 95,000 barrels per day of supply over the 10-year period.

“The oil market impact is going to depend on the timing, because it isn’t that much,” said Ann-Louise Hittle, the vice- president of research at Wood Mackenzie.

If the reserves are sold to the market during times of low seasonal demand, Hittle says, or when refineries are undergoing maintenanc­e, prices could fall as a result.

Futures contracts f or benchmark crude West Texas Intermedia­te rose nearly one per cent in Tuesday trading to around US$ 51.50. Brent Crude contracts were also up at US$54 per barrel.

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