Toronto Star

Rail deals could relieve oil bottleneck

Shipping issue intensifie­s since Kinder Morgan froze work on key project

- KEVIN ORLAND

CALGARY— Alberta’s beleaguere­d oil industry may get some relief from its persistent shipping bottleneck­s in the second half of the year as producers strike deals with rail companies to move more crude.

Oil producers and railroads have room to strike deals that will make economic sense for both parties, Cenovus Energy chief executive officer Alex Pourbaix said.

The rail providers are already hiring and training crews and reactivati­ng locomotive­s to help boost their crude-shipping capacity, said Keith Chiasson, head of the company’s down- stream operations.

“I’m really confident that as we move into the second half of the year and into the first half of 2019, we’re going to be seeing very material volumes of oil moving by rail,” Pourbaix said on a call with analysts Wednesday.

A lack of adequate capacity to move crude from Alberta’s oilsands has crimped the price of Western Canada Select.

The industry’s struggle to gain more options for shipping its oil — whether by pipeline or rail — has intensifie­d since Kinder Morgan said this month that it was halting work on a key conduit to the Pacific, drawing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau into the fight save the project.

To protect rail companies’ investment­s, the shipping deals this year will likely have “fair” pricing, a longer duration than previous agreements and some requiremen­t that producers pay for the capacity even if they don’t use it, Pourbaix said. The industry’s current transporta­tion constraint­s also showed up in the first-quarter results for Cenovus, which reported profitabil­ity per barrel was down 21 per cent from a year earlier. The company posted a net loss of $914 million in the quarter, while analysts had projected a loss of $166 million.

Pourbaix said most of last quarter’s miss was attributab­le to losses from the company’s hedging program and other temporary issues, and investors seem to be giving him the benefit of the doubt, sending shares of Cenovus up as much as 7 per cent.

He also said that he expects that most, if not all, of the three major pipeline projects the industry is counting on to proceed.

However, until the company has more certainty on that front, it won’t invest in major projects to increase its production, he said.

“This is costing the Alberta economy and the Canadian economy somewhere well north of probably $10 billion a year,” Pourbaix said in an interview. “This is an extraordin­arily important issue.”

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The price of Western Crude Select has been squeezed by a lack of capacity to move crude from Alberta’s oilsands.
JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO The price of Western Crude Select has been squeezed by a lack of capacity to move crude from Alberta’s oilsands.

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