National Post (National Edition)

Pipeline relief on the horizon with surprise moves to pump more oil through existing lines.

Unexpected additions may help clear glut

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

CA LGA RY • Unexpected additions to Canada’s existing pipelines could relieve the pain felt by the country’s oil companies and reduce the total number of railway cars moving oil by late next year.

The Canadian subsidiary of Houston-based Plains All American Pipeline LP this week announced it was seeking contracts from oil companies to underpin an expansion to its existing Rangeland pipeline system by 80,000 barrels of oil per day.

The expansion will be completed in stages, with the first stage finished by the end of this year and later expansions operationa­l by 2021.

“We remain focused on leveraging our existing systems in creative ways to meet the growing needs of our customers,” said Tyler Rimbey, Plains Midstream Canada vice-president, commercial, in a release.

Analysts said the 80,000bpd expansion is not enough to relieve pressure on Canada’s overstretc­hed pipeline export system by itself, but it follows similarly unexpected additions from competing pipeline companies such as Enbridge Inc. and TC Energy Corp. that cumulative­ly could alleviate pressures on the system.

“That will take away the immediate need for capacity, because that will at least take away the barrels that don’t currently have a home because they can’t get on transporta­tion,” said Dinara Millington, vice-president of research at the Canadian Energy Research Institute.

Total oil production in Canada exceeds pipeline space by 350,000 bpd when you add up the amount of oil being produced in Alberta and the amount of oil that could be produced if the provincial government lifted production limits.

With the unexpected additions, the cumulative efforts of the large pipeline companies will add 450,000 bpd of space to the existing pipeline networks over the next couple of years, essentiall­y removing the pressure in the medium term.

Those efforts include a 50,000-bpd addition to TC Energy’s existing Keystone pipeline to the U.S. Gulf Coast, additions to Enbridge’s main line network to the U.S. Midwest and Central Canada, and the planned reversal of Enbridge’s Southern Lights pipeline, which is currently used to import light oil for blending with oilsands, but will be used to export oil from Canada beginning in 2023.

“We’re still showing a gap this year and most of next year,” Millington said. “Some of these upgrades aren’t going to happen overnight.”

That gap is partially because of a one-year delay to Enbridge’s Line 3 pipeline replacemen­t through Minnesota, which the company initially expected would be in service by the end of 2019. Additional pipelines such as the federally owned Trans Mountain Expansion and TC Energy’s Keystone XL will be needed for longer-term growth.

“Longer term, we’d still need the Line 3 replacemen­t, and TMX and to a certain extent Keystone XL,” Millington said.

Still, the unexpected additions are providing some small hope for the energy industry, which is trying to find a way to clear a glut of oil built up in Alberta. Though producers have shut-in production, existing pipelines are maxed out.

“The good times appear to be rolling in Canada in recent weeks, or at least combating some of the rough (pipeline opposition related) bumpiness,” Tudor Pickering & Holt analysts said in a research note.

The analysts noted that all three companies are planning to add 155,000 bpd more pipeline space to existing networks than previously expected.

As a result, the analysts believe there will be less oil moving on railway cars at the end of 2020 than previously expected. They still expect oilby-rail exports to hit 400,000 bpd in early 2020, but that will drop to 325,000 bpd when the pipeline additions are complete.

 ?? JASON FRANSON FOR NATIONAL POST FILES ?? An increase in pipeline capacity by Plains Midstream, TC Energy and Enbridge could result in less Canadian crude being shipped by rail by the end of next year, analysts say.
JASON FRANSON FOR NATIONAL POST FILES An increase in pipeline capacity by Plains Midstream, TC Energy and Enbridge could result in less Canadian crude being shipped by rail by the end of next year, analysts say.

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