英国央行报告


跨山石油管道扩建(TMX)旨在缩小加拿大石油相对于美国原油的价差,但三个月来的价差比该项目开始商业运营时的价差更大。

许多分析师曾预测,由于多伦多证券交易所提供的额外 590,000 桶/日的出口能力,西加拿大精选原油 (WCS) 与美国原油的价差将逐渐缩小至个位数。

但相反,在阿尔伯塔省哈迪斯蒂交割的 WCS 交易价格却比基准西德克萨斯中质原油 (WTI) 低 15 美元/桶左右,而 5 月 1 日(即商业运营的第一天)美国原油价格为每桶 11.75 美元。WTI 近几周已跌至每桶不到 74 美元。

加拿大是世界第四大原油生产国,该国石油公司多年来一直苦苦挣扎,生产速度超过了出口管道的可用空间,导致原油在艾伯塔省陷入瓶颈。TMX 的启动意味着加拿大终于有了多余的管道容量,但预期的油价上涨并未实现。

在上周的收益电话会议上,  TMX 的主要托运人Cenovus Energy 和 加拿大自然资源有限公司都将责任归咎于多种因素。

这些因素包括来自墨西哥重质原油进口对美国墨西哥湾沿岸的竞争加剧,以及美国炼油厂停产,其中包括埃克森美孚位于伊利诺伊州乔利埃特的251,800桶/天的炼油厂,该工厂上个月受到龙卷风袭击后断电,大部分装置下线,目前尚未完全重启。

即便如此,公司高管仍然乐观地认为,未来几个月 WCS 折扣将开始缩小。

Cenovus 商业执行副总裁杰夫·默里 (Geoff Murray) 表示:“我想说,我们预计 Trans Mountain 输油管道在接下来的一段时间内将继续在阿尔伯塔省发挥其预期的影响,并且价差将像很长一段时间以来一样小。”

“关于 Trans Mountain 输油管道项目,最重要的是,我们已经看到该设施投入使用。它已经投入使用,并且运行良好。”

加拿大皇家银行资本市场分析师格雷格·帕迪 (Greg Pardy) 表示,加拿大西部的管道出口似乎运行顺利。

他在给客户的报告中写道:“主要的美中不足可能是美国部分地区的库存水平升高,但时间会证明一切。”

《商品背景》通讯创始人罗里·约翰斯顿表示,主要酸性原油消费国中国的需求疲软也对全球重质原油价格造成压力。他补充说,对扩建跨山管道将大幅缩小 WCS 差异的预期有些过头了。

约翰斯顿说:“TMX 的主要价值实际上并不是较低的 WCS 差值,而是出现另一次差值爆发的可能性极低,即使价格回到 15 美元以上,我们也不希望看到这种情况。”

在 TMX 投产之前,加拿大生产商容易受到出口管道拥堵的影响,偶尔会引发 WCS“断流”,导致贴水暴跌至比美国原油每桶低 40 多美元,导致他们损失数百万美元的收入。

 

(不列颠哥伦比亚省的 Nia Williams 报道;Sandra Maler 编辑)

主图(来源:路透社)


原文链接/OilandGas360

BOE Report


The Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion (TMX) was meant to shrink the discount on Canadian oil versus U.S. crude but three months in the differential is wider than when commercial operations on the project started.

Many analysts had forecast the differential on Western Canada Select (WCS) versus U.S. crude would gradually narrow to single digits thanks to the extra 590,000 barrels per day (bpd) of export capacity offered by TMX.

But instead WCS for delivery in Hardisty, Alberta, is trading around $15 a barrel below benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil, versus $11.75 a barrel under the U.S. crude on May 1, the first day of commercial operations. WTI has declined in recent weeks to less than $74 a barrel.

Oil companies in Canada, the world’s fourth-largest crude producer, have struggled for years with production outpacing the space available on export pipelines, causing crude to get bottlenecked in Alberta. TMX’s start-up means Canada finally has spare pipeline capacity, but the expected boost to prices has not materialized.

On earnings calls last week, Cenovus Energy and Canadian Natural Resources Ltd, both major shippers on TMX, blamed a number of factors.

These include increased competition on the U.S. Gulf Coast from Mexican heavy crude imports and U.S. refinery outages including ExxonMobil’s 251,800-bpd Joliet, Illinois, plant that took most of its units offline after losing power following a tornado last month and has not yet fully restarted.

Even so, company executives remained optimistic that the WCS discount would start to narrow in coming months.

“Over the next little while I would say we expect Trans Mountain to continue to have its intended impact in Alberta and differentials to be as narrow as they have been in a long time,” said Geoff Murray, executive vice-president of commercial at Cenovus.

“The important thing around Trans Mountain is we’ve seen the facility come online. It’s up, it’s operating and it’s operating well.”

RBC Capital Markets analyst Greg Pardy said pipeline egress out of western Canada appeared to be running smoothly.

“The main fly in the ointment may be elevated inventory levels in select U.S. regions, but time will tell,” he wrote in a note to clients.

Weak demand from major sour crude consumer China was also weighing on heavy oil grades globally, said Rory Johnston, founder of the Commodity Context newsletter, adding that expectations that expanding Trans Mountain would significantly narrow WCS differentials had been overdone.

“The main value of TMX wasn’t really a low WCS differential but rather a vastly lower probability of another differential blowout, which fingers crossed we still aren’t going to see here even if we’re back above $15,” Johnston said.

Prior to TMX’s start-up, Canadian producers were vulnerable to congestion on export pipelines occasionally triggering WCS “blowouts” in which the discount plunged to more $40 a barrel below U.S. crude, costing them millions of dollars in revenues.

 

(Reporting by Nia Williams in British Columbia; Editing by Sandra Maler)

Lead image (Credit: Reuters)