Calgary Herald

New rules on shipping fuel cut demand for Canadian oil

- ROBERT TUTTLE

As if pipeline bottleneck­s weren’t enough, Canadian heavy oil producers are facing a new barrier to marketing their crude.

New rules limiting the amount of sulphur allowed in shipping fuel are expected to cut demand for both high-sulphur fuel oil and the sour crude that yields it. In Canada, that could extend — or worsen — the biggest price slump in nearly five years.

As surging production runs up against limited pipeline space, Western Canada Select’s discount to West Texas Intermedia­te widened to more than $31 a barrel this month from an average of about $13 a barrel last year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The bigger discount is needed to incentiviz­e shipping by rail, which costs more, said Kevin Birn, a director on the North American crude oil markets team at IHS Markit.

While the pipeline bottleneck is expected to ease up next year, a new Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on rule that goes into effect in 2020 will keep heavy crude at a discount of $31 to $33 a barrel against WTI, according to a July report by the Canadian Energy Research Institute, or CERI.

“We think you get a double whammy effect” in 2020, he said. “You have prices set by rail and, compoundin­g that, is the IMO” rule.

Under the new rules, oceangoing ships worldwide will either have to install expensive, sulphurrem­oving scrubbers or use a fuel that has 86 per cent less sulphur. The resulting increase in demand for lighter crude will push more crude toward the complex North American refineries that currently turn heavy Canadian oil into higher-value fuels such as gasoline and diesel, putting downward pressure on heavy crude prices, according to CERI.

The rule change will come just as Canadian producers should be getting some relief in the form of greater pipeline access to U.S. and internatio­nal markets.

Enbridge Inc.’s expanded Line 3 is scheduled to start operating in late 2019, delivering heavy oil from Alberta to Wisconsin. The $9.3-billion expansion of the Trans Mountain oil pipeline from Alberta to the British Columbia coast is scheduled to start about a year later, and TransCanad­a Corp.’s Keystone XL pipeline awaits a final investment decision but could start operating early in the next decade.

There’s still reason for optimism, however, as diminishin­g heavy oil production from strife-torn Venezuela and Mexico could help raise prices for Canada’s crude, Birn said.

The Alberta government’s pledge earlier this year of $1 billion to partial upgrading projects also may help Canadian producers overcome the challenges of the IMO rule, said Dinara Millington, vice-president of research at the CERI.

Unlike massive full upgraders, a smaller and cheaper partial upgrader would lighten the bitumen just enough so that it can flow through pipelines with little or no added condensate. Such plants could also remove impurities such as sulphur, Millington said. No such plants have been built in the oilsands yet, as various partial upgrading technologi­es are still in early stages of developmen­t.

 ?? JIM MONE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Enbridge’s expanded Line 3 is scheduled to start delivering oil from Alberta to Wisconsin in late 2019.
JIM MONE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Enbridge’s expanded Line 3 is scheduled to start delivering oil from Alberta to Wisconsin in late 2019.

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