The Telegram (St. John's)

Drowning in crude

U.S. drillers say Trump strategic reserve plan is no lifeline

- DEVIKA KRISHNA KUMAR

NEW YORK — President Donald Trump’s plan to fill the U.S. emergency crude oil stockpile has become the centrepiec­e of his administra­tion’s strategy to shield drillers from a meltdown in energy demand – but company officials and industry groups said the program will not be enough.

Trump announced his intention to fill the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve “to the top” on March 13 as global oil prices went into freefall during the coronaviru­s outbreak as government­s issued stay-at-home orders that have obliterate­d fuel demand.

But drillers are now balking at the government’s offer to take their oil. Company officials and traders have cited the difficulty of transporti­ng it from inland fields to delivery sites on the Gulf Coast and worry placing it in the reserve’s vast salt caverns could compromise its quality.

They also worry that the program is too small. Global oil demand generally averages about 100 million barrels per day, but the pandemic is estimated to have cut that by about a fifth. While major oilproduci­ng nations led by Saudi Arabia have cut output and companies are closing wells, the oversupply is projected to linger for months or years leading to waves of bankruptci­es in the U.S. energy industry.

“I don’t see (the SPR program) providing a significan­t benefit to the masses in Texas,” Ed Longanecke­r, president of the Texas Independen­t Producers and

Royalty Owners Associatio­n.

The administra­tion’s initial idea for the SPR was to purchase 77 million barrels of oil – the amount required to fill all available space in the reserve – directly from small U.S. producers most at risk from the market slump.

But after Democratic lawmakers blocked funding for the program, the administra­tion shifted strategies by offering the initial 30 million barrels of space for lease instead.

The Department of Energy said it was now negotiatin­g contracts with nine companies to store a total of just 23 of the 30 million barrels initially offered in the reserve.

DOE spokeswoma­n Shaylyn Hynes did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

“I know the plan to lease SPR storage went over like a lead balloon,” said one source at one of the largest oil trading shops in the world, asking not to be named.

The Independen­t Petroleum Associatio­n of America did not immediatel­y provide a comment on the SPR program, but said it was hoping for more sweeping aid, including “royalty relief, lease extensions, and access to federal loan programs.”

The Trump administra­tion has said it is looking at ways to ease a cash crunch in the ailing industry, including by possibly increasing loan limits under the recently passed CARES Act economic stimulus package.

LOGISTICAL CONSTRAINT­S

The DOE’S SPR loan proposal asks companies to deliver sweet crude oil to its sites either in Bayou Choctaw, Louisiana, or Big Hill or Bryan Mound in Texas. It is taking sour crude at the West Hackberry site in Louisiana.

Many small producers find it challengin­g to access those salt caverns dotting the U.S. Gulf Coast.

While several pipelines connect inland shale fields to the Gulf Coast region, space on the lines is either locked up by large oil companies or not worth the expense now as oil prices have crashed, traders said.

Companies were instead mainly opting to cut production, according to traders and officials with drilling companies. U.S. output surged to a record near-13 million barrels per day in late 2019 but has dropped off sharply in recent weeks.

 ?? REUTERS/FILE ?? A maze of crude oil pipes and valves is pictured during a tour by the Department of Energy at the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in Freeport, Texas in 2016.
REUTERS/FILE A maze of crude oil pipes and valves is pictured during a tour by the Department of Energy at the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in Freeport, Texas in 2016.

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