BloombergBusinessweek is reporting:
In the last two months, traders and oil companies have been
moving their crude oil out of the giant tanks in Cushing, Okla., faster
than at any time in recent memory. Since late June, crude inventories at
the country’s biggest oil storage hub have plunged some 40 percent,
from about 50 million barrels to 34 million as of Aug. 30.
The drawdown effectively marks the end of an historic glut of crude
that built up in Cushing over the past three years, as double-digit
increases in domestic oil production overran the U.S.’s ability to move
it around. “What this really reflects is the removal of the bottleneck
and a rebalancing of the country’s pipeline infrastructure,” says Tim
Evans, an energy analyst at Citigroup.
The
pipeline industry has worked feverishly to reorient the country’s oil
pipelines around new sources of domestic crude production in the middle
of country. New pipes have been built and old ones reversed to get more
crude out of places such as North Dakota and Oklahoma and into refining
hubs along the Gulf Coast. That’s essentially the opposite of what they
were intended to do, when increasing imports needed to be piped from the
coasts to the interior of the country.
Last year, Enterprise Products Partners and Enbridge reversed the flow of the 500-mile Seaway Pipeline to take crude out of Cushing and into Freeport, Tex. After a slow ramp up, and some hiccups along the way, Seaway is now pumping about 300,000 barrels per day out of Cushing.
Oil
from the Permian Basin in West Texas that used to flow into Cushing is
now getting piped straight to refiners outside Houston. In April, Magellan Midstream Partners’ Longhorn Pipeline reversed its flow and started moving crude from El
Paso into Houston. In June, Sunoco’s Permian Express pipeline started
moving about 90,000 barrels of crude per day out of Wichita Falls, Tex.,
and into Port Arthur.
In July, BP’s massive refinery in Whiting, Ind., restarted after a nine-month modernization process and is now funneling more crude out of Cushing.
Much, much more at the link. A must-read.
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