https://finance.yahoo.com/news/repsol-looks-alberta-replace-mexican-110000684.html
(Bloomberg)
-- Repsol SA is looking as far away as Western Canada for oil for its
European refineries amid dwindling supplies from Mexico and Venezuela.
The
Spanish oil company is considering using rail to transport as much as
half-a-million barrels of heavy crude a month 1,911 miles (3,075
kilometers) from Alberta to Montreal before loading it onto tankers
bound for Europe, according to people familiar with the situation. The
company has also considered shipping the crude to New Jersey for
shipment to Europe.
The
European company has typically sourced heavy crude supplies from Latin
America, particularly Mexico and Venezuela. But U.S. sanctions, as well
as civil strife, have crippled Venezuela’s oil production, which has
fallen to less than 700,000 barrels a day from more than 2 million four
years ago. Mexico’s oil production has fallen for 14 straight years to
1.83 million barrels a day in 2018. That’s left Repsol looking for
alternatives.
Repsol declined to comment in an email.
Repsol’s
European refineries hold about 25% of the continent’s coking capacity,
according to the company. Coking units allow refineries to process
heavier crude, which is typically cheaper than lighter oil, into
high-value fuels such as gasoline and diesel.
Alberta’s
landlocked status means it ships nearly all of its crude oil to the
U.S. by pipeline or rail. The Trans Mountain pipeline to the Pacific
Coast allows a tiny fraction to be shipped to Asia. The long distance to
market has kept Canadian heavy crude selling for less than West Texas
Intermediate futures. The discount was more than $20 a barrel on Monday.
Shipments
of oil sands crude to Europe are rare. Repsol occasionally gets heavy
Canadian crude via U.S. Gulf ports, where Canadian oil competes with
U.S. crude for sea berths and space on pipelines.
About
400,000 barrels of Alberta crude were sent to the U.K. last year, the
first significant shipment to Europe since 2014, when a tanker of
Alberta crude left a terminal near Montreal for shipment to Italy,
according to the Canadian International Merchandise Trade database.
Repsol produces conventional heavy crude in west-central Alberta at its Chauvin field.
To
contact the reporters on this story: Robert Tuttle in Calgary at
rtuttle@bloomberg.net;Lucia Kassai in Houston at
lkassai@bloomberg.net;Rodrigo Orihuela in Madrid at
rorihuela@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: David Marino at dmarino4@bloomberg.net, Mike Jeffers, Kevin Orland
For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com
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