Enterprise Products Partners and Enbridge Energy Partners are contributing to record levels of oil supplies held at the transit
hub in Cushing, Oklahoma. The 500-mile, 30-inch diameter Seaway
Pipeline, a joint venture between the two oil companies, resumed service
on Friday with an improved capacity of 400,000 barrels per day, an
increase of 150,000 barrels.
With the pipeline’s expansion enabling increased volumes of crude oil
from the Midwestern United States to reach refineries along the Gulf
Coast, prices on Europe’s Brent crude oil benchmark fell.
On Friday, Brent for February settlement dropped 1.5 percent to $110.27 per barrel on the London-based ICE futures exchange,
which was the greatest decrease since December 6. As a result, the gap
between the European benchmark and the U.S.-traded West Texas
Intermediate crude oil shrank by $1.01 to $17.06 a barrel, the narrowest
premium since September 21.
The Seaway pipeline expansion start-up is continuing as planned, and crude oil is flowing through the line, a spokesman at Enbridge said on Friday.
The expanded 400,000-barrel-per day line, more than twice the 150,000 bpd previously, started up Friday.
Light Louisiana Sweet, the benchmark low-density, low-
sulfur crude on the Gulf Coast, weakened 25 cents to a premium
of $16.85 a barrel more than West Texas Intermediate in Cushing,
according to data compiled by Bloomberg at 11:30 a.m. in New
York. That’s LLS’s lowest premium to the U.S. benchmark since
Sept. 6.
Heavy Louisiana Sweet oil’s premium to WTI shrank 50 cents
to a $16.50. Mars Blend, a medium-gravity, high-sulfur crude
from the Gulf of Mexico, weakened by $1 to a $12.25-a-barrel
premium to WTI.
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