The Southwest Booster

Lack of pipelines will cost Canada $15.8 billion this year

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A shortage of pipeline capacity is driving down the price of Canadian oil and will cost the country’s energy sector CAD$15.8 billion in lost revenues this year, finds a new study released May 8 by the Fraser Institute, an independen­t, non-partisan Canadian public policy think-tank.

“Without adequate pipelines to tidewater ports, Canadian oil producers are forced to sell their product in the U.S. at dramatical­ly discounted prices, which results in substantia­l losses for the energy sector and the economy more broadly,” said Kenneth Green, senior director of natural resource studies at the Fraser Institute.

The study, The Cost of Pipeline Constraint­s in Canada, finds that as oil production ramped up in Canada in recent years, pipeline constructi­on has not kept pace. And despite approvals from review agencies, the status of several major pipeline projects remains uncertain.

This lack of adequate pipeline capacity has created an overdepend­ence on the U.S. market and an increased reliance on oil-by-rail—a more costly (and less safe) mode of transport. The result?

Even after adjusting for quality difference­s and transporta­tion costs, Western Canada Select—the heavy oil extracted from Canada’s oilsands—sells for much less than comparable West Texas Intermedia­te oil.

In fact, this year, the price difference between Canadian and US oil is US$26.30 per a barrel, which will lead to a CAD$15.8 billion loss for Canada’s energy sector.

Between 2012 and 2017, the price difference averaged US$16.54 per barrel, costing Canadian producers an estimated CAD$20.7 billion in foregone revenues.

“More pipeline capacity would not only benefit the energy sector and our economy, it would also benefit the environmen­t because pipelines are safer than rail,” Green said.

“For Canadians to continue prospering from our natural resources, the federal and provincial government­s must work together to expedite the pipeline process and connect Canada’s oil producers with markets overseas.”

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