Toronto Star

Oilpatch’s next challenge is cutting sea pollution

Alberta crude’s desirabili­ty at issue

- ROBERT TUTTLE

CALGARY— A new threat looms for Canada’s largest oil producing province, even as it imposes mandatory output cuts to ease a glut that has driven down crude prices.

A rule taking effect in 2020 aimed at reducing pollution by cutting the sulphur content of maritime fuel will make sulphur-heavy oilsands crude less desirable. The change may dampen the long-term impact of a mandatory production curtailmen­t in Alberta Sunday, and lessen the benefit of plans to ease the region’s transport bottleneck.

Heavy oil prices sank to less than $15 a barrel last month, as rising production swamped existing pipelines and rail routes, forcing some producers to shut in output. The situation got to the point that Alberta Premier Rachel Notley mandated supply cuts across the industry.

“We’ve got challenges with respect to pipelines, we’ve got challenges with respect to rail and now we’ve got challenges with respect to our demand market,” Allan Fogwill, chief executive officer of the Canadian Energy Research Institute said at a presentati­on in Calgary Wednesday.

Next year, rail exports could almost double from a record 270,000 barrels a day in September, according to company announceme­nts. In the second half of 2019, Enbridge’s Line 3 will add 375,000 barrels a day of extra pipeline capacity. That’s around the time the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on 2020 rule starts to impact local crude prices, according to analysts including CERI’s Fogwill, IHS Markit’s Kurt Barrow and Wood Mackenzie’s Mark Oberstoett­er.

Western Canadian Select, the main oilsands grade, may average about $20 a barrel below West Texas Intermedia­te for most of next year, about equal to the cost of rail transport, said Wood Mackenzie’s Oberstoett­er, lead analyst for Canadian upstream research. Gains from Line 3 will almost be cancelled out by losses from the IMO ship fuel rules.

During the first year, the shipfuel standard will make WCS crude about $7 or $8 a barrel cheaper relative to West Texas Intermedia­te futures than it would normally be, IHS Markit’s Barrow, vice president of the oil markets for midstream and downstream energy, said by phone from Houston. WCS traded at $29 a barrel less than futures on Friday, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

 ?? EFREM LUKATSKY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A rule taking effect in 2020 is aimed at reducing pollution by cutting the sulphur content of maritime fuel.
EFREM LUKATSKY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A rule taking effect in 2020 is aimed at reducing pollution by cutting the sulphur content of maritime fuel.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada