National Post

Canadian light oil stuck with oilsands discount

ENERGY

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CA LGA RY • The same factors that have inflated the discount paid for Canadian oilsands heavy crude compared with U. S. oil are also driving a substantia­l rise in the discount for light Canadian oil.

Accounting firm Deloitte says in a report that the difference between New Yorktraded West Texas Intermedia­te and Edmonton Light oil prices widened to US$ 7.32 per barrel in January, an 86 per cent increase over the average of US$ 3.93 per barrel in the fourth quarter of last year.

Deloitte partner Andrew Botterill says the lower relative pricing for Canadian crude is partly caused by pipeline capacity constraint­s as oil production rises in Canada. A key conduit to the U. S. market, TransCanad­a Corp.’s Keystone pipeline, remains at lower capacity following a leak in November.

He says there’s also less room for Canadian crude in U. S. refineries, which are running at a 13- year high of above 90 per cent of capacity.

Deloitte predicts Canadian price differenti­als will start to return to historic norms as the new Sturgeon Refinery northeast of Edmonton ramps up production this year, soaking up some of Alberta’s oilsands crude surplus, and as more refinery room becomes available in the U.S.

It adds that the Alberta government’s recent initiative­s to encourage building partial upgrading facilities for oilsands crude, if successful, will also help free up more export pipeline room.

About 850,000 barrels per day of Canada’s oil production is convention­al light oil — the rest of the 4.5 million bpd total is oilsands bitumen and convention­al heavy oil.

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