U.S. refiners eye Canadian oil once strategic reserve turns off taps
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[September 20, 2022] By
Stephanie Kelly and Nia Williams
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. refiners are
expected to buy more Canadian oil after the Biden administration ends
releases from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) this fall, traders
said, adding this should boost the price of Canadian barrels at a time
of tight global supply.
The coming end of SPR releases could shift market dynamics again in a
year of high volatility following Russia's invasion of Ukraine in
February. In March the White House announced it would release 180
million barrels from the U.S. strategic reserve to help quell high
prices.
The releases have weighed on the price of Western Canada Select (WCS),
the benchmark Canadian heavy grade. That oil, because it has similar
qualities to the sour crude that dominates U.S. reserves, has traded at
around $20 a barrel below U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude for
much of the summer. In 2021 the average WCS discount was $12.78 a
barrel, according to the Alberta Energy Regulator.
The WCS discount to WTI is expected to narrow as the SPR supply
dwindles, market sources said.
"Once that overhang goes through, and it may not be in Q4 or Q1 but in
Q2 and beyond, we should see a much stronger differential than where we
are right now," one trader said. He added that he expected WCS traded in
Alberta to be around $14 or $15 a barrel under WTI next year, compared
with about $21 now.
However, increased medium sour crude production from OPEC countries such
as Saudi Arabia, as well as discounted Russian Urals, could keep that
differential wider, according to RBN Energy.
Canadian crude exports from the U.S. Gulf have dropped in the last two
months, falling to around 130,000 barrels per day (bpd) in July and
August, below last year's pace of 200,000 bpd, said Matt Smith, lead oil
analyst for the Americas at Kpler. Foreign buyers have turned to
discounted Russian barrels, tempering Canadian crude exports.
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The Imperal Oil refinery is seen in an
aerial photograph taken along the St. Clair River, one of many
facilities in Canada's "Chemical Valley" in Sarnia, Ontario, Canada
November 3, 2021. Picture taken November 3, 2021. REUTERS/Nick
Iwanyshyn/File Photo
"It's a bit of a game of musical chairs," Smith said. "When the SPR
releases finish, these refiners will look to lean harder again on
Canadian barrels or seaborne imports."
Some market participants worry that limited pipeline capacity from
Canada to the United States could cause bottlenecks. This could
cause a glut in the Alberta hub, which could in turn drive down
prices there.
Canada hit record production of 5.5 million barrels a day of oil in
2021, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, and
is forecast to reach 5.7 million bpd this year.
Enbridge Inc is once again rationing pipeline capacity, in a
practice known as apportionment, on its Mainline system as Canadian
output has risen. That system ships the bulk of Canadian crude
exports to the United States.
Apportionment fell steeply last year when the Line 3 pipeline
expansion opened and stopped entirely from March until July, but
Enbridge has since started rationing capacity on its Mainline again.
Crude deliveries into the Kerrobert, Saskatchewan, hub were
apportioned by 2% in August and 6% in September, Enbridge said.
(Reporting by Stephanie Kelly and Nia Williams; Editing by David
Gregorio)
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