Texas oil pipelines face dry months as production languishes
Send a link to a friend
[April 13, 2021] By
Devika Krishna Kumar
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Nearly half of all oil
pipelines from the Permian basin, the biggest U.S. oilfield, are
expected to be empty by the end of the year, analysts and executives
said.
Pipeline companies went on a construction spree throughout 2018 and 2019
to handle blistering growth in U.S. crude production to a record 13
million barrels per day (bpd). However, the coronavirus pandemic crushed
both fuel demand and oil production, and neither have recovered fully,
leaving many pipelines unused.
Major pipeline companies are exploring ways to ship other products in
those lines and considering selling stakes in operations to raise cash.
The coronavirus pandemic upended the global energy supply system and
worldwide fuel demand. U.S. gasoline consumption is now estimated to be
past its peak and as refiners process less crude, producers are not
filling pipelines used to transport it.
By the fourth quarter, total utilization of the largest oil pipelines
from the Permian is expected to drop to 57%, consultancy Wood Mackenzie
said. The nadir during the last market bust in 2016 was roughly 70%.
U.S. crude output is currently about 11 million bpd, and is not expected
to grow much until 2022. But more pipelines were already set to come
online, growing the gap between production and capacity covered by
long-term contracts to a record over 1 million bpd in February,
according to energy research firm East Daley Capital.
"We do not expect to be at pre-COVID production levels by end-2022,"
said Saad Rahim, chief economist at commodities merchant Trafigura.
REVENUES HIT
The top three Permian pipeline companies are offering discounts to
entice shippers and stem the fall in volumes. Companies rely on
long-term contracts that require customers to ship a certain volume of
oil or pay a penalty. Now companies are renegotiating those agreements
at lower rates when they are close to expiring, to keep their customers.
Magellan Midstream Partners LP's transportation and terminals revenue
slid 9% to about $1.8 billion in 2020, the lowest since 2017. The
company has only enough long-term contracts to fill its 275,000-bpd
Longhorn pipeline to 70% capacity over the next six years, Magellan
said.
With more pipelines adding to competition, Magellan expects daily
volumes on Longhorn to drop to an average 230,000 bpd this year versus
270,000 bpd in 2020. A Magellan spokesman said the company could use its
marketing arm to buy space on the Longhorn line and sell it to ad-hoc
buyers.
[to top of second column] |
Pipelines run to Enbridge Inc.'s crude oil storage tanks at their
tank farm in Cushing, Oklahoma, March 24, 2016. REUTERS/Nick
Oxford/File Photo
Plains All American Pipeline LP's transportation revenues fell about 13% to $2
billion in 2020, and warned that earnings could suffer further if production
declines. Plains did not comment for this story.
Pipeline companies can make some money even when oil is not flowing through
pipelines. Producers pay what are known as deficiency payments - penalties for
not shipping oil. Still, those payments are small. Plains reported $71 million
in deficiency payments in 2020, less than 4% of its overall transportation
segment revenue.
Some companies are considering retrofitting pipelines to ship liquids besides
crude, such as renewable fuels.
Enterprise Products Partners LP's co-Chief Executive Jim Teague recently told
analysts that he was fielding queries from a petrochemical company that needs
pipeline transport and storage for potential hydrogen projects.
Enterprise's crude pipelines and services revenues plunged 35% in 2020. In
February, it said it has long-term contracts to ship about 1 million bpd through
2028 and beyond, compared with average volumes of 2 to 2.2 million bpd over the
past two years.
The company did not comment for this story.
As pipeline companies have struggled, investor returns have suffered. The
Alerian MLP index, which tracks the performance of midstream companies, is down
24% since the beginning of 2020, compared with a 27% return for the S&P 500.
"A lot of companies had to cut their dividends," said Rob Thummel, senior
portfolio manager at TortoiseEcofin. "It has created some skepticism on the
investor base about the sustainability of the sector."
(Reporting by Devika Krishna Kumar in New York; additional reporting by David
FrenchEditing by Marguerita Choy)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |