Explosive
Virginia Train Carried Fracked Bakken Oil, Headed to Potential Export
Facility
30
April, 2014
Platts confirmed CSX Corporation's
train that exploded in Lynchburg, Virginia was
carrying sweet crude obtained via hydraulic
fracturing (“fracking”) in
North Dakota's Bakken
Shale basin. CSX CEO Michael
Ward has
also confirmed
this to Bloomberg.
“Trade
sources said the train was carrying Bakken crude from North Dakota
and was headed to Plains All American's terminal in Yorktown,” Platts
explained.
“The Yorktown facility can unload 130,000 b/d of crude and is
located on the site of Plains oil product terminal.”
In
January, the U.S. Department of Transportation's Pipeline
and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration issued a Safety
Alert concluding Bakken crude is more flammable than heavier oils.
Hence the term “bomb
trains.”
At
least 50,000
gallons of the oil headed to Yorktown is now missing,
according to ABC 13 in Lynchburg. Some
of it has spilled into the James River,
as previously reported on DeSmogBlog.
A map
available on CSX's website displaying
the routes for its crude-by-rail trains offers a clear indication of
where the train was headed.
Formerly
a refinery owned by Standard Oil and then BP/Amoco,
Plains All American has turned the Yorktown refinery into a mega
holding facility.
Yorktown
may become a key future site for crude oil exports if the ban on
exports of oil produced domestically in the U.S. is lifted.
Yorktown: Future Oil Export Mecca?
In
February, Plains CEO Greg
Armstrong said
on the
company's quarter four earnings call that Yorktown
is ideally situated geographically to become an oil export mecca if
the ban is lifted.
When
asked by an analyst from Bank of America about the ongoing debate
over lifting the crude oil export ban, Armstrong discussed how Plains
could stand to profit from exports.
“Ultimately
we’re positioned, we think well for either answer if they allow
blanket exports we have assets in the right places that can help
build that market niche,” said
Anderson.
Harry
Pefanis,
President and COO for Plains, sang a similar tune
to Anderson.
“I
guess if I also just add to that if there was export…we’ve got
couple of locations that we could load ocean-going vessels. Yorktown
is a location where we can rail-in and load out an ocean-going
vessel,” Pefanis explained.
The industry
lobbying effort to lift the U.S.-produced oil export ban has picked
up major steam in
2014,
with the geopolitical
crisis in Ukraine and Russia serving as the hook.
Keystone XL Connection
It's
only a matter of time until the familiar oil industry overture
begins. That is, pointing to the Lynchburg disaster as the reason why
the northern leg of TransCanada's Keystone XL tar sands
pipeline must be built.
After
all, the
same thing happened after
the Burlington
Northern Santa Fe(BNSF)
freight train
carrying Bakken oil exploded in Casselton, North Dakota in
December 2013.
What
the industry and oil-soaked politicians are unlikely to discuss,
though, is the Plains All American connection to Keystone XL.
That connection comes in the form of Cushing, Oklahoma, home of
another key Plains crude oil holding facility.
Founded
in 1993, Plains'
“first major asset” was its Cushing holding facility,
according to the company's website. At the time, it had a storage
capacity of 2 million barrels per day, though the facility has grown
immensely since then.
In
November 2010, Plains announced it would open an additional four
million barrels of storage capacity at its Cushing Terminal
Facility. That upped its capacity to 18 million barrels per day.
Why
the massive increase?
Enter the original TransCanada Keystone pipeline, or Phase 1 in industry lingo. The original TransCanada Keystone 1 runs from Alberta to Steele City, Nebraska.
Enter the original TransCanada Keystone pipeline, or Phase 1 in industry lingo. The original TransCanada Keystone 1 runs from Alberta to Steele City, Nebraska.
But
it now extends down to Cushing, Oklahoma, Port Arthur, Texas, and
Houston because Keystone XL's southern leg (rebranded
the Gulf Coast Pipeline Project and Houston Lateral Pipeline) opened
for business in January 2014 thanks to an Obama
White House March 2012 Executive Order.
The
November 2010 expansion revolved around ingesting the glut of oil
flooding Cushing from the Keystone Pipeline system into Plains'
holding facility.
“[The]
expansion consists of making a high-capacity connection to Keystone
Pipeline,” explains
a Plains press release.
“The Partnership plans to be ready to accept Keystone deliveries in
the first quarter of 2011.”
Canadian tar
sands crude
traveling via Keystone XL,
since it is extracted north of the border, is fair game for
— and likely
headed to — the global export market.
If
things go Plains All American's way, the Bakken fracked oil headed to
its Yorktown facility will head to the global export market like the
tar sands crude departing from its Cushing, Oklahoma
holding facility.
But CSX's
mega-explosion in Lynchburg, Virginia may have put a damper on
those dreams for the time being, as public attention is drawn to the
risks of shipping oil in “bomb trains.”
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