Tag Archives: Port Arthur

Exxon's Not So Minor Oil Spill

By Arjun Sreekumar, The Motley Fool

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In the energy industry, oil spills are more common than one might think. Though media attention tends to focus primarily on the most devastating ones, smaller ones do happen from time to time, despite the industry’s renewed focus on safety measures since the infamous BP Deepwater Horizon incident – the worst accidental oil spill in history.

Just ask ExxonMobil .

ExxonMobil pipeline ruptures
On March 29, ExxonMobil’s 940-mile Pegasus crude oil pipeline ruptured near Mayflower, Ark. – a town some 25 miles northwest of Little Rock. According to the Mayflower Incident Unified Command Joint Information Center, the spill has been classified as a major one by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

The pipeline, which starts in Patoka, Ill., transports some 95,000 barrels per day of mainly heavy Canadian crude oil to a terminal in Nederland, Texas, that is operated by Sunoco Logistics, now part of Energy Transfer Partners . Exxon reversed the line’s flow in 2006 in order to transport crude to the Gulf Coast refining hub.  

Pegasus, which is 20 inches in diameter, serves refineries in the Port Arthur and Beaumont regions. According to Bloomberg, there are four major plants near Nederland – operated by Exxon, Valero , Total, and Motiva Enterprises – that are capable of processing some 1.4 million barrels of crude a day.

At the time it ruptured, the line was transporting Wabasca Heavy Crude from western Canada. Wabasca Heavy is a blend of heavy crude oil produced in Alberta’s oil sands by Cenovus Energy, Canadian Natural Resources , and Suncor Energy. Due to its physical qualities, it is in high demand by U.S. Gulf Coast refiners.

Effect on benchmark crude prices
The line’s temporary closure, which will reduce the supply of crude from western Canada and the U.S. Midwest, is likely to worsen the glut of oil in those regions. Due to limited transportation options, crude oil in those two regions has been trading at a substantial discount to the global crude oil benchmark, Brent.

In fact, Western Canada Select (WCS) – the benchmark for western Canadian crude – had been trading at a discount more than $30 even to West Texas Intermediate (WTI) – the primarily U.S. crude oil benchmark – until very recently, due to severe limitations in outbound pipeline capacity from Alberta.

WTI‘s discount to Brent, which narrowed to its lowest level since July on March 28, increased to $14.01 on Monday, as WTI fell $1.22. Meanwhile, WCS slipped by $0.65 a barrel on Monday and was trading at a roughly $15 discount to WTI toward the end of the day.  

Exxon’s response
Exxon is currently under way with an excavation and removal plan for the damaged portion of the pipeline. In an announcement yesterday, the company said it gathered roughly 12,000 barrels of oil and water from the spill.  

It also reportedly deployed fifteen vacuum trucks and 33 storage tanks to the area where the spill occurred. According to a statement by …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

U.S. Gas Prices Dip

By Dan Dzombak, The Motley Fool

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Gasoline prices were down slightly versus the previous week in every section of the U.S. except the Midwest and the Rocky Mountains, according to data released Monday by the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Nationally, the price of a gallon of gas was down nearly 0.4% in the past week and is down 1.4% in the past month, that’s below the 3.1% drop in the price of WTI Crude, and the 7.3% drop in Brent Crude.

 

Regular

WTI Crude

Brent Crude

3/18/2013

$3.696

$93.71

$108.55

Week Ago

$3.71

$92.07

$108.64

Month Ago

$3.747

$96.69

$117.04

Year Ago

$3.867

$108.09

$125.76

Source: U.S. EIA.

We’ll have to wait and see if gasoline prices prematurely peaked this year or if they have more room to run. The past two years, the national price of gasoline peaked sometime in April to early May.

Source: U.S. EIA.

Regionally, gas prices vary quite a bit, with the West Coast having the highest prices. On a weekly basis, gasoline prices were down in all areas except the Midwest, where they increased, and the Rocky Mountains, where they stayed the same.

Source: U.S. EIA.

The price of oil is far below its price last year when the oil markets were worried about Iran. With the price of oil down so much since then the obvious question is: Why is the price of gas so high now?

Refinery outages play a role. Many refineries do necessary maintenance in the winter months as demand is the lowest. We need to wait till tomorrow for last week’s refinery utilization data. For the previous week, ending March 8, the EIA data showed refineries are utilizing slightly less capacity than last year across the U.S at 81%. That is the lowest utilization rate so far this year.

According to a roundup from Dow Jones Newsires, there are many planned and unplanned production outages at U.S. refineries currently:

Among the unplanned outages, notable ones include Chevron , which has a crude distillation unit offline at its refinery in Richmond, Calif. The company reportedly said yesterday it expects to have the unit back online by the end of March.

Phillips 66 had its refinery in Sweeny, Texas, stop production after it lost power from a third-party source on March 10. Power was fully restored the next day and it was expected that production would fully resume by March 14-16.

Valero Energy has a hydrocracking unit currently out of service at its Port Arthur, Texas, facility for a compressor repair. There is no estimate on when the unit will be restarted. Valero also had a hydrocracking unit shut down in Benicia, Calif., on March 10, a restart date has not yet been set, according to Dow Jones Newswires.

Among planned outages, ExxonMobil has a coker unit undergoing planned maintenance at its Baytown, Texas, refinery. Meanwhile Alon’s …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance