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Canada Oil Sands Asia Export Dream Faces Port Bottleneck

Canada Oil Sands Asia Export Dream Faces Port Bottleneck

Reuters
Total Views: 13
November 21, 2016

Marchers protesting against the proposed expansion of Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain Pipeline walk towards downtown Vancouver, B.C., Canada November 19, 2016. REUTERS/Chris Helgren

ReutersBy Catherine Ngai

VANCOUVER, Nov 20 (Reuters) – The bullish view for Suncor Energy Inc, Cenovus Energy Inc and other Canadian energy producers calls for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau by next month to approve a major pipeline expansion to the west coast, boosting sales of land-locked oil sands crude to Asia.

But a growing number of shipping brokers and physical oil traders warn that any new influx of oil will hit a bottleneck in Vancouver, because of the port’s inability to accept the megaships that dominate oil trade globally.

This bottleneck marks one of the more under appreciated hurdles facing Canadian oil sands crude being shipped from its busiest port of Vancouver, these shipping brokers say.

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Middle Eastern producers already ship oil ship to Asia far more cheaply, thanks to the bigger vessels they employ. And U.S. Republicans winning out in this month’s election have revived hopes that TransCanada Corp could build the Keystone XL pipeline to the United States, sidestepping Vancouver altogether.

Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr told reporters Tuesday that Keystone “doesn’t get oil to export markets in Asia, and it’s a goal of the government of Canada to expand its export markets.”

The decision in front of Trudeau is whether to expand Kinder Morgan Inc’s 300,000-barrel-per-day (bpd) Trans Mountain pipeline, which carries Alberta crude to Vancouver. The project, fiercely opposed by many environmentalists and aboriginal groups, would increase total capacity to 890,000 bpd.

Currently, some 98 percent of Canadian crude exports reach the United States, where it sells at a discount to world prices. Vancouver is the only west coast port where it can be sold on to Asia.

“If Canada can’t get their oil to another market besides the U.S. (market), you’ll always be a price taker, not a price maker,” said Sandy Fielden, director of oil and products research at Morningstar.

Cenovus, which has previously exported oil to Asia and is a regular shipper on Trans Mountain, said that while the pipeline expansion would be an important step, it’s only a partial solution.

“We still need additional pipeline capacity to reach deep-water ports in Canada and the U.S. where we can access large tankers,” said spokesman Reg Curren.

The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers said earlier this year that output from Canada’s oil reserves is set to outpace infrastructure to bring it to market in coming years, citing the need for more pipelines including those to global markets.

AFRAMAX VS SUEZMAX

The largest-sized oil tanker that can dock in Vancouver is an Aframax, which can carry 500,000 to 700,000 barrels. Vessels at the port can only be loaded up to 80 percent capacity due to depth and other restrictions, meaning a vessel can only be filled to around 550,000 barrels.

That’s a stark contrast to the one million barrel Suezmaxes, or the two million barrel very large crude carriers (VLCCs) commonly found in Iraq or Singapore.

As long as the port can only take Aframaxes, it will remain largely uneconomical for exports to head to Asia, said Matt Smith, director of commodity research at ClipperData LLC, which tracks vessel movements.

The Port of Vancouver, which houses Kinder Morgan’s marine oil terminal, said it expects nearly 400 crude and chemical tankers a year under the expansion from 100, but there are no plans to allow bigger tankers into the port.

Loadings of Aframax tankers are expected to grow to one a day from about five per month, said Ali Hounsell, a spokeswoman for the Trans Mountain Expansion Project.

But ship brokers said that getting enough Aframaxes to Vancouver would be difficult. They note many are tied up on a popular Russia-to-Asia route already, so costs would have to increase to divert those vessels.

Most vessels that currently load in Vancouver go to refineries in Washington State, California or Hawaii, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon shipping data.

“The Canadian producers will sell the oil where they can get the highest price. In the short-term, that seems to be on the U.S. west coast,” said Erik Broekhuizen, head of tanker research and consulting at ship broker Poten & Partners Inc.

In October, a vessel carrying around 150,000 barrels of crude left to South Korea. Prior to that, the same vessel carried some 77,000 barrels to China in June and the same volume in May. The rare and few shipments, according to traders, are a sign of just how difficult it is logistically to bring large volumes of Canadian oil to Asia.

Traders said the price of Canadian crude shipped to Asia needs to be low enough to offset the cost of shipping across the Pacific on smaller vessels. They also note many Asian refiners prefer Iraqi crude due to lower acidity.

“India and China can take it if it’s cheap,” said an analyst with a North Asian refiner who declined to be named as he’s not authorized to speak to media. “It really depends on the price and freight.”

Still, Wood Mackenzie analyst Afolabi Ogunnaike said that with demand from Asian refiners for heavy crude growing, exports to Asia may be the best option for Canadian oil.

He estimates at least 50 percent of the new volumes carried to Vancouver, around 300,000 bpd, would head to Asia.

While some disagree on just how much of an impact the expansion will have on trade flows, they say that the possibility of an added destination is a boon for the market regardless.

“There’s always a period of turbulence when you open a new trade route,” said Sarp Ozkan, a senior energy analyst at consultancy Ponderosa Advisors LLC. “I’m not saying it’s going to be easy. But in the end, if Canada is successful in finding a market to Asia, they’ll find a better way to schedule these Aframaxes or another way to get it there.”

(Additional reporting by Florence Tan in Singapore and Liz Hampton in Houston; editing by Edward Tobin)

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2016.

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