Windsor Star

Easing pipeline congestion benefits oil producers

- DAN HEALING

Canadian oil producers are pocketing higher profits as a rise in world oil prices meshes with an improving supply-demand balance that has reduced the price discounts they faced earlier this year. Analysts say temporary shutdowns at Alberta oilsands projects for scheduled maintenanc­e this spring have eased the pipeline congestion that had been exacerbati­ng the difference between bitumen-blend Western Canadian Select and New York-traded West Texas Intermedia­te crude prices.

That means the oil producers — some of whom cut back output in the first quarter because of poor prices — are seeing benefits from WTI prices that rose to three-and-a-half-year highs above US$71 per barrel this week following U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal. “The rally in WTI has some fundamenta­l support and is not all related to Iran and Venezuela,” energy analyst Randy Ollenberge­r of BMO Capital Markets pointed out in an email on Friday. “Demand is clearly improving ... A further drop in Venezuela production is also a real possibilit­y that could provide a further boost to prices.”

Iran is the third-largest producer of crude within the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, exporting about 2.6 million barrels per day in April. Prices rose this week on speculatio­n that its exports could be interrupte­d if sanctions are reapplied by the West.

Global oil prices are also being supported by factors including sliding heavy oil production from Venezuela, which is wracked by political instabilit­y, and strong adherence to production limits from OPEC and Russia under their 2016 agreement, said Kevin Birn, vice-president of the North American crude oil markets for IHS Markit. “Western Canadian producers, any higher price is unambiguou­sly good for them,” he said.

“The situation on pipelines has temporaril­y been resolved, primarily because of the upstream outages and (maintenanc­e) turnaround­s going on, which is allowing the system to clear ... and hopefully allowing time for rail to come in.” Uncertaint­y continues to plague proposed new pipelines. The Keystone XL project from Alberta to Texas has been delayed, the future of an expanded Trans Mountain line to Vancouver is in doubt and a routing dispute has emerged over Enbridge Inc.’s Line 3 export pipeline replacemen­t project. Birn said the WCS-WTI discount, which closed at US$19.73 on Thursday, narrowed to an average of about US$12 per barrel last year due to demand in North America for heavy oil but rose quickly after November due to pipeline constraint­s. It peaked at about US$30 per barrel in the first quarter.

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