RBN Energy:
update on the Seaway Pipeline Expansion -- and yes, this affects the Bakken.
Throughout the three year-long disruption of the US crude oil
distribution system caused by rising domestic and Canadian production
trying to find a path through the Midwest, the Seaway pipeline reversal
project has been a market bellwether of progress to unwind the
congestion. In 2Q 2014 the final phase will come online - opening up an
additional 450 Mb/d capacity between Cushing and Houston. As the Seaway
project has been built out, the crude surplus in the Midwest appears to
have moved to the Gulf Coast. Today we detail the impact of Seaway Phase
3 on Gulf Coast crude supplies.
A bit more detail from the earlier snippet:
By the time that Seaway Phase 3 comes online during the second
quarter of 2014, we will already have observed the impact of as much as
700 Mb/d of additional crude capacity coming online from Cushing to Port
Arthur sometime in January via TransCandada’s Cushing Marketlink
Pipeline (CMP). As we detailed in the previous episode in this series,
the volume of crude flowing on CMP will be constrained by a lack of
supplies at Cushing. We cited two reasons for that lack of supply- first
continued delays in building the northern leg of the Keystone XL
pipeline that was supposed to feed into CMP and second the limited
pipeline capacity to deliver crude into Cushing from Chicago until the
585 Mb/d Enbridge Flanagan South project is completed in mid 2014.
Without those pipeline links there is not enough crude flowing into
Cushing to feed the 700 Mb/d CMP and the 450 Mb/d Seaway expansions.
But shippers on the Seaway expansion should be in better shape next
year than their counterparts on the CMP. That is because the Seaway
expansion comes online at the same time as the Flanagan South project
and the two pipelines share a common owner in Enbridge. That means
Seaway shippers should be able to secure adequate supplies of Canadian
or Bakken crude at Cushing via Flanagan South. Their counterparts with
commitments to ship crude on the CMP have no such connection to crude
supplies from Canada or North Dakota until the Keystone XL northern
section receives a Presidential permit and gets built – an event that
may never happen - and if it does, will not be completed before 2016 at
the earliest.
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