Times Colonist

CP seeks ‘skin in game’ from shippers to boost bitumen transport

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CALGARY — Crude-by-rail shippers are being asked to sign multi-year, take-or-pay contracts that guarantee minimum volumes before Canadian Pacific Railway will assign locomotive­s and crews to help move a backlog of oilsands crude out of Western Canada.

The railway wants its customers to have significan­t “skin in the game” before it commits to the costs involved in scaling up its oil-shipping capacity, chief financial officer Nadeem Velani told a CIBC World Markets conference in Whistler on Friday.

“What we’re looking for, short-term, is to build in some commitment­s with customers to either commit a certain level of volumes or, you know, have a take-or-pay arrangemen­t where they would pay damages if they didn’t meet those volumes,” he said.

While reporting its fourth-quarter results last week, CEO Keith Creel said CP Rail would only reluctantl­y add crudeby-rail volumes, fearing the business will end suddenly when new pipelines come on stream as early as 2020 because pipeline transport is generally less expensive.

Velani said CP Rail’s oil shipments have “effectivel­y doubled” from one year ago and conceded they could be higher if CP assigned more resources, adding it takes time and money to hire and train staff and reactivate locomotive­s from storage.

Cenovus Energy Inc. CEO Alex Pourbaix said he’s confident Canadian railroads will get on board over the next few months to increase the movement of heavy oil.

“We are negotiatin­g with both of the rail companies,” he said, adding they are both seeking two-to-three-year commitment­s.

“At the end of the day, I think there is ample margin for both parties to come together and for rail to get an enhanced return and for the producers to get a muchenhanc­ed netback.”

Cenovus is expected to produce about 370,000 barrels per day of non-upgraded bitumen this year and has been hit hard by higher discounts being paid for Western Canadian Select crude, a blend of bitumen and lighter crudes, Pourbaix said.

Prices paid for WCS have failed to follow the rally in benchmark New York-traded West Texas Intermedia­te to three-year highs, in part because of pipeline capacity constraint­s out of Western Canada.

Pourbaix said Cenovus is looking to increase shipments from its crude-by-rail terminal near Edmonton. It was loading an average of about 11,000 barrels per day through the first nine months of 2017, but it has a rated capacity of 77,000 bpd and connection­s to CP Rail and Canadian National.

CN Rail reported it had reduced its oil shipping by 30 per cent in the last three months of 2017 to assign more trains to move grain. Chief marketing officer JeanJacque­s Ruest said on a conference call it is now offering Canadian crude shippers increased capacity in the second half of 2018, but with higher pricing than last year under take-or-pay contracts.

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