The Hamilton Spectator

New marine fuel standards set to hit oilsands crude

- DAN HEALING

CALGARY — Canada’s oilsands industry, hard hit by a price storm this year, could be sailing straight into a pricing typhoon stirred up by new fuel standards for the internatio­nal shipping industry.

The tighter pollution rules by the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on, dubbed IMO 2020, are set to take effect Jan. 1, 2020, resulting in the sulphur content limit of “bunker” fuel on ships dropping from 3.5 per cent to just 0.5 per cent.

The switch is expected to wallop prices for heavy oil containing high levels of sulphur — exactly the kind of the raw bitumen that makes up about half of Canada’s 4.4 million barrels per day of crude oil production.

“It’s bad news for any producers of heavy, sour crude oil,” said Martin Tallett, president of Massachuse­tts-based oil market research firm EnSys Energy.

“The shock is going to go through the system and affect all products, all regions.”

Canada’s energy industry faced a widening spread between

Canadian heavy crude prices compared with New York-traded West Texas Intermedia­te earlier this year that many observers blamed on a shortage of capacity on export pipelines out of Canada.

The coming marine shipping rules could double or even triple the discount on Canadian heavy, pushing it potentiall­y much wider than the US$30 a barrel discount producers encountere­d earlier this year, Tallett said.

The resulting decline in demand for bitumen compared with lighter crudes could result in higher discount prices that

last until 2022, according to a report from RBC Dominion Securities researcher­s.

The looming deadline is a concern at Calgary-based Cenovus Energy Inc., where about 360,000 barrels per day or 91 per cent of its overall production is bitumen, produced from its steam-driven oilsands wells in northern Alberta.

The IMO 2020 rules, along with uncertaint­y about when pipeline bottleneck­s will be cleared, and limits on the company’s ability to process its oil at the U.S. refineries it co-owns, are issues to consider before any moves are made to expand production, said downstream senior vice-president Keith Chiasson.

“We are obviously watching that space,” he said on a recent conference call, adding, “Do we want to bring new production growth into that market if we start seeing (new pipelines) deferred and delayed as well as the IMO impact coming?”

The US$30 discount paid for bitumen-blend Western Canadian Select versus WTI in the first quarter, up from its typical discount in the mid-teens, prompted Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. to rein in bitumen production and led Husky Energy Inc. to buy more oil from others — it was cheaper than producing its own.

Uncertaint­y continues to plague proposed new export pipelines including TransCanad­a’s Keystone XL project, the expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline (despite it being sold to the federal government) and Enbridge’s Line 3 pipeline replacemen­t as environmen­tal opposition to the projects remains high.

Environmen­tal concerns have also prompted action in the marine shipping industry, which is considered a highly energy efficient way to move goods over long distances but still harmful due to emissions.

Most bunker fuel burned on ships is derived from the “residue” that remains after all of the more valuable light fuels such as gasoline and diesel have been removed from crude oil.

Following combustion in the engine, the sulphur in the fuel becomes sulphur oxide, a pollutant that causes respirator­y symptoms and lung disease as well as acid rain, which can harm crops, forests and aquatic species, and contribute­s to the acidificat­ion of the oceans.

The IMO first began restrictin­g emissions in 2005 and its limits on sulphur in bunker fuel have been progressiv­ely tightened. Four “emission control areas” in Europe and North America already have a 0.1 per cent limit.

Bunker fuel prices are expected to rise as the IMO 2020 standards lead to expensive upgrades at refineries around the world — by up to US$60 billion per year if there’s full compliance with the new rules, consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie said in an April study.

 ?? JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canada's oilsands industry is sailing toward a pricing typhoon stirred up by new fuel standards for the internatio­nal shipping industry.
JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada's oilsands industry is sailing toward a pricing typhoon stirred up by new fuel standards for the internatio­nal shipping industry.

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