I posted this the other day, that the Sandpiper might be at risk. Yesterday,
Reuters reported that Enbridge's Sandpiper looks be latest victim of overbuild.
The long-planned
and oft-delayed Sandpiper pipeline through the U.S. Midwest may not be
dead, but it appears to be on life support, a likely casualty of the
oil-and-gas industry's infrastructure overbuild amid a two-year global
oil rout.
After years of
delays, refiner Marathon Petroleum Corp and midstream giant Enbridge Inc
on Tuesday announced they would scrap their joint venture agreements
and transportation services for the 450,000 barrels per day Sandpiper
project, instead agreeing to acquire a portion of the rival Dakota
Access Pipeline.
That $1.5 billion deal, if successful, will
leave Sandpiper without Marathon as its main anchor, even though an
Enbridge spokesman said plans for the line are still being evaluated.
The project involves two pipeline legs stretching from North Dakota
through Minnesota to Wisconsin.
Outgoing
pipeline capacity from the Bakken is currently at around 641,000 bpd,
according to Genscape. Once Dakota Access becomes operational, capacity
will rise to 1.21 million bpd.
That
projected increase comes against the backdrop of a dramatic decline in
oil prices that has weighed on production in North Dakota's Bakken play,
one of the biggest beneficiaries of the boom in U.S. shale production
over the last several years.
The
Dakota Access Pipeline, slated to stretch from North Dakota to Illinois,
is expected to come online in the fourth quarter. With global oil
futures down by 70 percent in the last two years, traders and analysts
say there just is not enough crude in production in the U.S. Midwest for
both pipelines.
In the short term, and possibly even long term, this gives some life to CBR since CBR still provides flexibility in getting oil to the East Coast, but in the big scheme of things, as long as North Dakota production remains around 1 million bopd or less, pipe will be adequate.
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