Houston Chronicle

Lack of pipelines cuts energy revival

Infrastruc­ture problems, regulatory issues blocking shale revolution’s success

- By Bernard L. Weinstein Weinstein is associate director of the Maguire Energ y Institute and an adjunct professor of business economics in the Cox School of Business at Southern Methodist University.

Thanks to what’s sometimes called the “shale revolution,” America has reemerged as an energy superpower. Even with prices 40 percent lower than a year ago, we remain the world’s number one producer of crude oil and other liquid hydrocarbo­ns. Imports of oil have dropped from 60 percent of consumptio­n to about 35 percent just in the past five years. We’re also the world’s largest producer of natural gas.

Both oil and natural gas output in America would be even higher if not for a number of regulatory and infrastruc­ture constraint­s. For example, crude oil exports have been virtually prohibited by law for more than 40 years while federal regulatory agencies have been slow to issue permits for the export of liquefied natural gas.

Drilling for oil and gas on the outer continenta­l shelf and federal lands is largely prohibited, while several states and local government­s have imposed bans on hydraulic fracturing. The Jones Act, which requires all goods shipped between U.S. ports be carried on American-built, -owned and -operated vessels, makes it more expensive to ship petroleum products from Corpus Christi to New Jersey than from Corpus Christi to Rotterdam.

Capacity low across U.S.

But the most serious nonregulat­ory constraint on expansion of America’s oil and gas production — other than low prices — is a lack of pipeline capacity, both upstream and downstream. For example, as production of natural gas has surged in the Marcellus and Utica shales of the Northeast, investment in pipeline and processing plant infrastruc­ture has lagged. Consequent­ly, Marcellus gas sells at up to a 50 percent discount to the national benchmark at Henry Hub. Though 10 new pipelines have been proposed to alleviate these takeaway constraint­s, the projects will take years to complete and some may never materializ­e because of pushback from environmen­talists and the difficulty of securing long-term supply agreements with electric utilities.

In terms of downstream bottleneck­s, President Barack Obama’s veto of the Keystone XL pipeline is perhaps the most egregious example. Opposition from environmen­talists and aboriginal groups has also stalled the Enbridge Northern Gateway project in Western Canada while another Canadian aboriginal group turned down a $1 billion fee to help push through a proposed gas pipeline and LNG terminal in British Columbia. A proposed dual pipeline between Albany, N.Y. and Linden, N.J., that would transport Bakken crude oil south and refined products north is also facing strong environmen­tal and community opposition.

Expense, safety on trains questioned

This lack of pipeline capacity helps explain why so much crude oil is now moving by rail tanker car. In 2008, only about 10 million barrels of oil were transporte­d by rail. Last year’s volumes exceeded 300 million. Though this growth has been a boon to the rail industry, moving crude oil long distances by train is more expensive than by pipeline, and spill rates are considerab­ly higher. Oil transport by rail is also under fire from environmen­talists, with seven groups filing a lawsuit on May 14 challengin­g recently issued safety rules for trains hauling oil.

Despite projected expansion of renewable energy sources and pushback from anti-hydrocarbo­n groups, the U.S. Department of Energy in its latest Quadrennia­l Energy Review predicts we’ll still be dependent on oil and natural gas to meet more than 60 percent of our energy needs in the year 2040. Because of our prolific shale plays, we should be able to supply virtually all of our future consumptio­n from domestic sources. But this won’t happen unless we make the requisite investment­s in essential infrastruc­ture, especially pipelines.

No doubt the environmen­tal lobby will jump on the recent rupture of an oil pipeline in California that spilled 500 barrels as another reason to fight new constructi­on. But we should keep in mind that last year our pipelines safely transporte­d more than 14 billion barrels of crude oil and trillions of cubic feet of natural gas.

Upgrading and expanding upstream and downstream pipeline networks can help sustain America’s energy renaissanc­e while creating thousands of new jobs. Not investing in our pipeline infrastruc­ture will stifle energy growth, leave us vulnerable to supply disruption­s and weaken our energy security.

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