National Post

Hibernia oil finds new markets

Newfoundla­nd crude moves farther afield

- Sheela tObben Bloomberg

NEW YORK • Newfoundla­nd and Labrador is finding new customers for its oil.

For years, large volumes of oil produced off the East Coast were shipped to U.S. refiners.

But booming U.S. output has cut the demand from nearby refineries. Newfoundla­nd’s oil exports to countries other than the U.S. are already up 59 per cent compared to all of last year, totalling almost 23 million barrels, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The number of non-U.S. recipients has grown to 14 countries from just six.

That means crude from Newfoundla­nd is ending up in places like Croatia for the first time. With sanctions on Iran’s oil looming and ship fuel regulation­s set to make the province’s crude more attractive, the number of new customers may continue to grow.

The declining price of U.S. benchmark crude relative to internatio­nal prices — which Newfoundla­nd uses — has spurred more East Coast refiners to look for shale, according to Gerry Goobie, general manager for marketing and transporta­tion at Canada Hibernia Holding Corp., the government­owned company that has an 8.5-per-cent interest in Newfoundla­nd’s Hibernia field.

“Newfoundla­nd crude sellers would need to find other buyers,” Goobie said by phone. “That’s why it’s going further afield.”

As the province moves forward with plans to double production by 2030, Newfoundla­nd oil has made its way as far north as Norway and as far east as China. Croatia is set to become the newest customer.

The ship Minerva Clara is en route to Omisalj on Croatia’s southern coast after loading at Newfoundla­nd’s Whiffen Head crude terminal on Aug. 18, according to ship tracking data compiled by Bloomberg. INA Industrija Nafte DD owns the Mediterran­ean nation’s only operating refinery in Rijeka near the port of Omisalj. It will be INA’s first purchase of Canadian crude, according to a person familiar with the matter.

A looming cap on sulphur emissions for ship fuels may also spur new customers.

“This is a market opportunit­y for heavy, sweet crude in Newfoundla­nd,” said Allan Fogwill, chief executive of the Canadian Energy Research Institute.

U.S. sanctions on Iran and Venezuela’s chronic production issues could also mean more interest for Newfoundla­nd’s oil despite the difference in qualities. Buyers looking to replace those sour crudes are likely to try the heavy to medium sweet Newfoundla­nd oil given its proximity in quality, even though it won’t be an exact replacemen­t. That might open up additional markets in Europe for Newfoundla­nd.

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