National Post

HARVEY TO DISRUPT OIL MARKETS FOR AT LEAST THREE MONTHS

2.6M BARRELS PER DAY OF REFINING CAPACITY ALREADY SHUT DOWN

- Geoffrey Morgan

• The economic impact of Hurricane Harvey’s destructio­n has been limited on Eastern Canada so far, but the fallout from the storm is expected to affect oil markets for months.

Harvey, a category- 4 hurricane later downgraded to a tropical storm, has battered Houston and the wider region since Friday, forcing thousands from their homes and shutting down many oil refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast.

Citi Research analyst Ed Morse said in a Wednesday note that Eastern Canada and Mexico import large volumes of oil from the U. S. and would be “most dramatical­ly impacted by weather- disruptive flows and potential hurricane damage.” This year, Eastern Canadian refineries have processed an average of 300,000 barrels of oil per day from the U.S., accounting for 12.5 per cent of total Canadian consumptio­n, Morse noted.

Barclays Capital analyst Paul Cheng said in a Wednesday research note that Harvey had shut in 2.6 million barrels of refining capacity per day at this point — or 15 per cent of total refining capacity in the country. “If there is prolonged flooding and severe weather, we would not be surprised if at its peak 2.53.0 million bpd (if not a bit a higher) of throughput is shutdown,” Cheng said.

In the last month, two shipments of oil from the U. S. Gulf Coast have sailed to refineries in Come By Chance, N. L. and Lévis, Que., Genscape oil market analyst Hillary Stevenson said. Eastern Canadian refineries had been processing even more oil from the U. S. Gulf Coast before August as there had been a disruption at the Syncrude Canada Ltd. upgrader in Alberta.

Howe ve r , Enbridge Inc.’ s Line 9 pipeline between Ontario and Quebec has allowed Western Canadian oil producers to send more oil eastward, helping reduce the need for U. S. and foreign oil in Eastern Canada, Stevenson said. As a result, the impact on Eastern Canada will be more muted, she said.

Suncor Energy Inc. and Imperial Oil Ltd. spokespers­ons said their refineries in Eastern Canada had not been impacted so far by the hurricane. Valero Energy Corp. did not respond to requests for comment.

A potentiall­y larger impact will be on Canadian oil producers, who have been working to access the U. S. Gulf Coast refining market for years.

Stevenson sa id TransCanad­a Corp. has reduced flows of Canadian crude oil on its pipelines between Cushing, Okla. and the U. S. Gulf Coast as a result of the hurricane, which has forced Canadian producers to stockpile more of their crude at large storage facilities in the U. S. Midwest.

“We could see a backup all the way to Edmonton and Hardisty,” Stevenson said, referring to the two largest oil storage hubs in Alberta.

Genscape refinery analyst Lee Williams said it’s unclear how long the refineries in Texas will be shut down.

“It’s still a little early to tell,” he said, noting some of the facilities on the coast were protected by levees, though there have been reports of flooding at others.

If Hurricane Katrina, which battered Louisiana in 2005, is a guide for how long it will take before the refineries on the Gulf Coast recover, it may take three months before oil production, gasoline prices and refinery utilizatio­n returns to pre- Harvey levels, ARC Energy Research Institute’s director of research Jackie Forrest said.

Forrest said she didn’t expect a major change in oil prices — either for West Texas Intermedia­te benchmarks or Western Canadian Select — as a result of the storm because both the supply of oil and the demand has been affected by the storm.

“When you look back at Katrina, there wasn’t much price escalation — WTI increased a couple dollars a barrel,” Forrest said, calling it “a pretty small change to prices.”

U. S. gasoline prices for September delivery rose 6.3 per cent to US$ 1.8964 a gallon, while West Texas Intermedia­te crude fell one per cent to US$45.96 a barrel.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? The road at the Marathon Texas City Refinery can barely be seen as rain from Hurricane Harvey causes flooding. Genscape refinery analyst Lee Williams said it’s unclear how long oil refineries in Texas will be shut down.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / AFP / GETTY IMAGES The road at the Marathon Texas City Refinery can barely be seen as rain from Hurricane Harvey causes flooding. Genscape refinery analyst Lee Williams said it’s unclear how long oil refineries in Texas will be shut down.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada