Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Experts See More Good Than Bad For Canada's Oilpatch If U.S. Oil Export Ban Ends

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Dec, 2015 11:47 AM
    CALGARY — Experts see more good news than bad for Canada's energy industry if the U.S. lifts its decades-old ban on oil exports.
     
    The ban came into force when oil shortages were commonplace 40 years ago — a stark contrast to today's U.S. glut, thanks to fracking in shale formations in Texas and North Dakota.
     
    Congressional leaders have reached a deal on a massive spending bill that includes allowing the sale of U.S. crude in the global market.
     
    Skip York, a vice-president at consulting firm Wood Mackenzie, says lifting of the ban could make it easier for Canadian crude to get to lucrative Asian markets.
     
    Right now, Canadian players need a re-export permit if they want to ship crude to the Gulf Coast and then export it to Asia via the Panama Canal.
     
    York says a policy change would remove that obstacle, but the first choice for Canadian producers is to still to send their crude by pipeline to the West Coast.
     
    Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain expansion to the Vancouver area is in the thick of the regulatory process, and has faced vocal opposition. Enbridge's Northern Gateway pipeline to Kitimat, B.C., has regulatory approval, but the Liberal government wants to ban tankers along the northern B.C. coast in what many see as a fatal blow to the project.
     
    Given the hurdles Canadian West Coast pipeline proposals have faced, the Plan B becomes more important.
     
    "It eliminates some of the regulatory burden for a Canadian producer who wants to sell into Asia and can't go through a pipeline to the West. They could still transit through the pipelines that connect Canada to the U.S. Gulf Coast and put it onto a ship," said York.
     
    TransCanada Corp.'s (TSX:TRP) existing Keystone system taps into the U.S. Gulf Coast. The Keystone XL leg, which President Barack Obama rejected in November, would have provided a more direct route between Alberta and Texas. Enbridge Inc.'s (TSX:ENB) network also has the ability to connect to the Gulf.
     
     
    Alan Ross, a partner at law firm Borden Ladner Gervais in Calgary, said it's important to note the differences between Canadian and U.S. crudes. In Canada, it's mostly tough to refine heavy oil whereas the oil flowing out of U.S. shale formations is mainly higher quality light oil.
     
    Gulf Coast refineries are set up to handle heavy crude.
     
    If the U.S. is able to send more of its own crude overseas, "then it may well be that there's more of a demand in those refineries for Canadian heavy to come in," said Ross.
     
    Ross said lifting the export ban could also narrow the price gap between the main U.S. benchmark, West Texas Intermediate, and Brent crude from the North Sea, which fetches a higher market price because it's able to travel around the world by sea.
     
    The higher international price has been a big driver for building pipelines to get landlocked crude to coastal waters.
     
    While there would still be value in those proposals, "if the delta between WTI and Brent is less, then you would view that international access or off-continent access a little bit differently," Ross said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Won't Set GHG Target But Calls Tory Targets The 'Floor'

    New Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Won't Set GHG Target But Calls Tory Targets The 'Floor'
    OTTAWA — Canada's new environment minister says the national target set by the Conservatives for cutting greenhouse gas emissions should be considered a floor for future action.

    New Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Won't Set GHG Target But Calls Tory Targets The 'Floor'

    Five Things To Know About The Liberal Pledge To Establish New Health Accord

    Five Things To Know About The Liberal Pledge To Establish New Health Accord
    Jane Philpott, Canada's new health minister, says she intends to reach out to the provinces and territories as early as this week to begin the lengthy process of establishing a new federal-provincial health accord.

    Five Things To Know About The Liberal Pledge To Establish New Health Accord

    Abbotsford Death Prompts B.C. To Announce Joint Review Of Children Housed In Hotels

    Abbotsford Death Prompts B.C. To Announce Joint Review Of Children Housed In Hotels
    The review comes after the recent death of 18-year-old Alex Gervais, who was in government care when he fell from the fourth floor of a hotel in Abbotsford.

    Abbotsford Death Prompts B.C. To Announce Joint Review Of Children Housed In Hotels

    Deadline Looms In Class Action Suit On Behalf Of Residential School Day Students

    The Sechelt Indian Band and the Tk'emlups Indian Band launched the day scholars class action suit in 2012, and the February deadline to opt in is approaching. 

    Deadline Looms In Class Action Suit On Behalf Of Residential School Day Students

    Canadian Military Spouses' Pension Problems To Be Reviewed

    Canadian Military Spouses' Pension Problems To Be Reviewed
    OTTAWA — The federal department in charge of retirement benefits has quietly been reviewing its protocols amid concerns that military spouses were wrongfully being rejected for old age security payments.

    Canadian Military Spouses' Pension Problems To Be Reviewed

    Quebec Artist Alfred Pellan Paintings, Replaced With Queen, Return To Government Building In Ottawa

    Quebec Artist Alfred Pellan Paintings, Replaced With Queen, Return To Government Building In Ottawa
    OTTAWA — Two paintings by Quebec artist Alfred Pellan are back on display in the Lester B. Pearson building, four years after the Conservatives removed them to make room for a portrait of the Queen.

    Quebec Artist Alfred Pellan Paintings, Replaced With Queen, Return To Government Building In Ottawa