Plains All American Pipeline
- to acquire Alpha Crude Connector (ACC)
- ACC
- extensive, FERC-regulated crude oil gathering system in the Permian's Delaware Basin
- $1.215 billion
- RBN Energy: right-place / right-time; addresses a fast-growing need for pipeline capacity across an under-served area
- when you read that line, think Bakken, Keystone XL, and DAPL
- ACC has multiple connections: flexibility -- Midland, the Gulf Coast, Cushing
- elsewhere, lower crude oil prices have resulted in lower production
- not so in the Permian: rising production
- particularly good: the Permian's 10,000-square-mile Delaware Basin sub-region, and particularly the northern Delaware
- improving technology wringing remarkable volumes of crude from Bone Springs, Avalon, Leonard, and Wolfcamp
- break-even costs have dropped from $60/bbl in 2013 to $30/bbl
- Permian is now the best return on investment anywhere in the US
- will continue, but assume takeaway capacity keeps up
- RBN Energy map at the link
- runs through the heart of the northern Delaware in southeastern New Mexico and West Texas
- vast majority of the pipeline is in Lea and Eddy counties (southeastern corner of New Mexico
- also in northern Culberson (no typo) County, TX
- a mainline from southwestern Lea County through northeastern Loving County (TX) to the Wink area in central Winkler County (TX)
- various elements of of ACC came on-line between late 2015 and late 2016 (really, really recent)
- promoters/developers: Frontier Energy Services (Energy Spectrum), 50%; Concho Resources , 50%
- Concho's net investment: $130 million; total investment estimated to be $260 million
- huge amount of time and scrutiny by federal government
- much of the pathway is through BLM land
- this was a huge, huge deal; think how Keystone XL and DAPL played out in comparison
- Frontier got creative with its storage rates;
- ACC installed 320 Mbbls of storage; received FERC approval to sell storage service to shippers at market-based rates; normally FERC services have pre-defined fixed rates, so this market-based crude storage is a relatively unusually approach amongst ACC's peers
- Frontier also implemented the first "gravity bank" that RBN Energy is aware of in the Permian
- like most crude basins, crude quality in the Delaware Basin varies from one zone to another and from one field to another
- generally, refineries and crude pipelines seeks crude that has an API gravity of less than 45 degrees
- generally, refineries impose penalties for lower-quality crude oil, but do not reward for high- -quality crude oil; WTI is 39 degrees;
- Frontier changes all that: penalties/rewards directly to the shippers; no profit to the pipeline
- as far as RBN Energy knows, ACC is the only pipeline in the Permian that uses a gravity bank
- ACC notable for being able to offer shippers optionality (as you read that, think the Bakken: CBR, Hiland, DAPL, Keystone
- right now, too much takeaway capacity in the Permian
- ACC makes up for that excess capacity by being able to ship almost anywhere:
- Plains' 450 Mb/d Basin Pipeline from Wink, TX
- Sunoco Logistics Partners' 150 Mb/d pipeline from Lea County, NM
- Enterprise Products Partners' 100 Mb/d pipeline from Hobbs, NM
- from Midland, there are pipelines to Cushing, OK; Houston, and Nederland, TX
- also offers two major refineries int he region: HollyFrontier's 120 Mb/d refinery in Eddy County, NM and Western Refining's 200 Mb/d refinery in El Paso, TX
- also to Genesis Energy's Wink rail terminal
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