Locator: 48566ARCHIVES.
Saturday, February 15, 2025
Unleashing American Energy -- American Energy Dominance -- Trump -- US Crude Oil Exports -- February 15, 2025
Locator: 48565OIL.
Tag: Sentinel Midstream crude oil export SPOT EPD Enterprise Products
A reminder before we get to Sentinel Midstream, with regard to SPOT:
Today:
RBN Energy's top ten prognostications for 2025, link here:
6. No offshore SPM crude oil terminal will be sanctioned in 2025.
We really hope to be proved wrong on this one, but it just looks like this is a case where the benefits do not justify the cost. Since 2018, numerous offshore single-point mooring (SPM) terminals have been proposed along the Gulf Coast to fully load a Very Large Crude Carrier (VLCC) without reverse lightering.
Currently, only the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP) can handle VLCCs but it is limited to two ships per month on average, far below the one per day a couple of the SPMs could manage.
The remaining projects — Energy Transfer’s Blue Marlin, Sentinel Midstream’s Texas GulfLink, Phillips 66’s Bluewater Texas, and Enterprise’s Sea Port Oil Terminal (SPOT) — have faced regulatory hurdles but made progress, with SPOT receiving its U.S. Maritime Administration (MARAD) license in April.
Yet none have reached a final investment decision (FID) after nearly seven years of development. The problem is shifting market dynamics. Initially, U.S. crude exports to Asia (15,000 nautical miles from the Gulf Coast) justified VLCC efficiencies, but Europe now takes 45% of exports compared to 40% to Asia, driven by demand shifts due to the Ukraine war and declining North Sea production. The shorter 5,000-nautical-mile trip to Europe diminishes the economic advantage of VLCCs, making shippers hesitant to commit to long-term capacity deals for the SPM terminals. Granted there are still good reasons for one or more of the SPMs to be sanctioned. But it is more difficult today to get shippers signed up than it originally looked, and that’s a situation that will likely get worse before it gets better.
Also from April 25, 2024, also on the blog:
RBN Energy: Sentinel Midstream's Texas GulfLink emerges as serious contender in export terminal race. Archived.
In the race to build the next deepwater crude oil export terminal in the Gulf of Mexico, Sentinel Midstream’s proposed Texas GulfLink (TGL) is currently in second place in the regulatory race, behind only Enterprise’s Sea Port Oil Terminal (SPOT) — and seems to be emerging as a serious contender. The plan offers some compelling attributes, including Sentinel’s status as an independent midstream player and plenty of pipeline access to crude oil volumes in the Permian and elsewhere. In today’s RBN blog, we turn our attention to TGL and what it brings to the table.
From today:
*********************
Recipes
Cooking rice. Grains.
Constitution Pipeline Update -- February 15, 2025
Locator: 48564PIPELINE.
Tag: Constitution pipeline
EO signed this week by President Trump to get this pipeline complete. Long history. Search "constitution pipeline" on the blog. Story goes all the way back to 2014, before the project was canceled by Williams (WMB) in 2020.
The Constitution Pipeline has taken on symbolic status for some energy advocates who have chafed at state opposition to oil and gas infrastructure. Although many parts of the US northeast sit next to some of the country’s most bountiful natural gas reserves, limited pipeline capacity has prevented much of that supply from making it to them. Constitution was designed to transport Appalachian gas from Pennsylvania to New York.
See this entry from five years ago:
February 27, 2020: Williams (WMB) cancels Marcellus to "New York" Constitution Pipeline.
124-mile pipeline, see also this update from 2019. One can begin to see the Canadian "monied" fingerprints all over this fight to stop the pipeline.
*********************************
The Book Page
The Brontës: Wild Genius On The Moor: The Story Of A Literary Family -- Juliet Barker, c. 2010.
The definitive biography of this family. Wow.
At nearly 1,000 pages I doubt I will complete it any time soon, but it's a nice book to read ten or fifteen pages at a time.
I spent a lot of time in this area of England, but it is interesting that being only 57 minutes by car from Haworth, England, where the Brontës lived, I only visited it once, as far as I recall. But it was one of the most rewarding, wonderful days I had in England. I remember it very, very well. Maybe I visited twice.
It is amazing how many books on the Brontës I've had in my library over the years! Most of them were given away to Arianna's high school literature teacher when I was forced to cull my library due to space limitations. I'm not sad I don't have those books any more but they do bring back wonderful memories; especially some rare books found at the museum in Haworth. Now, fortunately, everything is available on the internet.