ANALYSIS | Canadian oilsands crude faces a $30 per barrel discount — and for once pipelines aren’t to blame | CBC News

A barrel of the North American oil benchmark is changing hands for about $90 US a barrel right now, but the heavy crude that comes from Canada’s oilsands is fetching $30 less because of a perfect storm of imbalances between supply and demand.

The oil blend known as West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was going for about $87 a barrel on Thursday. That’s down from recent highs, but still far more than the price offered for every barrel of crude oil from Canada’s oilsands, a thick, tarry, and “sour” type of crude that goes by the name Western Canada Select (WCS).

WCS was fetching a little over $53 US a barrel on Thursday, the cheapest level it’s been since Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine, which pushed oil prices to their highest level in years on fears of a wider war, and sent countries scrambling to replace sanctioned Russian crude.​

It’s also more than $34 per barrel cheaper than WTI, which is the widest gap between the two blends since 2018.

Western Canada Select almost always sells at a discount to WTI, because only a comparatively small number of refineries are capable of handling it. It’s generally seen to be of lower quality because of its high sulphur content, which makes it a “sour” blend, versus a “sweeter” blend like WTI. That means refineries have to be calibrated in a certain way just to process it, which pushes down the price of WCS to offset that added cost.

Then there’s the cost of shipping it from Northern Alberta to refineries in the United States, which even under ideal circumstances add another $5 to $10 discount on the price of every barrel. Oil is priced in U.S. dollars because like many commodities including gold, the market is international.

Pipelines aren’t to blame this time

Drum-tight pipeline capacity is normally to blame any time the spread between the two oil blends is as wide as it is right now, but experts say that isn’t the case this time around.

Instead, there are fewer buyers for WCS because multiple refineries that process it are offline at the moment. And there’s reduced demand for oil overall because of fears a recession is coming. 

Add it all up and it’s a perfect storm of reasons why the bottom has fallen out of Canada’s oil price, said Vijay Muralidharan, director, R Cube Economic Consulting Inc. “Demand is falling and when demand falls the differential widens,” he told CBC News in an interview.

Fall is typically the season when refineries shut themselves down to perform maintenance, but there’s even more refineries than normal offline right now, due to unplanned shutdowns. A 160,000-barrel-per-day refinery in Toledo, Ohio, was shut down due to a fire in August, and while it reopened last month, it’s not yet back to full capacity. 

An even bigger one in Whiting, Ind., near Chicago, normally processes 430,000 barrels of oil per day, but it, too, was knocked offline by a fire, and it has also yet to get back to normal. 

“A lot of Canadian heavy crude goes to that refinery and if it goes off it’s a big hit to WCS,” Muralidharan said. So Canadian crude that would normally be refined somewhere around Chicago is having to travel further afield to get processed.

Barges idle while waiting for passage in the Mississippi River near Vicksburg, Miss., on Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2022. The unusually low water level in the lower Mississippi River is causing barges to get stuck in the muddy river bottom, resulting in delays. (Thomas Berner/The Associated Press)

Mississippi River barges exacerbating the problem

Some of it would normally travel by river, but that route is also part of the problem right now because of abnormally low water levels on the Mississippi River, said Rory Johnston, founder of the Commodity Context newsletter.

“They typically barge a bunch of these products out [but] the Mississippi is running very dry so there’s concerns about bottlenecks and shipping there as well,” he said in an interview.

At least a half dozen barges on the Mississippi have been grounded in the past week, the U.S. coast guard says, causing shipping delays and concerns that more could get stuck. One of the results of that bottleneck is that refineries that rely on the river to bring in crude and ship out product are temporarily losing their appetite for Canadian oil.

“The low level of the Mississippi does seem to be weighing on WCS prices, given the supply dislocations it is causing,” oil analyst Matt Smith with Kpler told CBC News in an email. “Refineries are seemingly having to dial back on activity because they are unable to move products.”

That reduced demand for Canadian crude is spreading from Chicago to every part of the complex oil supply chain.

“We’re actually seeing the weakness extend all the way down to the US Gulf Coast,” Johnston said.

There’s more than enough pipeline capacity to get oil wherever it needs to go at the moment. But even once those WCS barrels get to the many refineries around the U.S. Gulf Coast, they’re then faced with their next problem: The Biden administration has been releasing millions of barrels from the nation’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve, in order to offset the tumult caused by Putin’s invasion.

Those barrels of WCS are sloshing around in the same refinery hub as those American barrels, trying to find a buyer. And all that crude is starting to pile up. Data from the EIA on Wednesday showed the total number of barrels of oil in storage in the U.S. increased by almost 10 million barrels last week. 

That means demand is waning, which is a general sign the economy is slowing — which means oil prices will face an uphill climb even under ideal circumstances.

“The good news here is that this doesn’t appear to be related to insufficient pipeline capacity for Canadian oil. The bad news is that it’s something almost entirely outside of our control right now,” Johnston said.

“It doesn’t seem to be getting better yet. So there’s an open question how bad this will get.”

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