I’m
surprised, and a little disappointed by Zero Hedge who have given
little coverage to the fires at Fort Mac and do not appear to have
joined the dots, You’d think they’d be over this.
A
Third of Power From Canada's Oil Sands Wiped Out by Fires
6
May, 2016
(Bloomberg)
-- Electricity flowing from plants at Canada’s oil sands operations
has shrunk by almost a third as a wildfire ravages the region,
forcing tens of thousands of people to evacuate in what may become
the country’s costliest catastrophe.
Cogeneration
plants that use steam from Alberta’s oil sands production were
supplying 936 megawatts of power to the region on Thursday,
electricity grid data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s down 30
percent from three days earlier.
Natural gas output in the province
has meanwhile dropped by a half-billion cubic feet a day since late
April, data compiled by Bloomberg New Energy Finance show.
While
the fire may affect more than a million barrels of oil sands capacity
a day, the power and gas drop-offs show how the impact of a blaze
wreaking havoc in Canada’s most energy-rich region extends beyond
its crude supply. Pipeline operator TransCanada Corp. said it has
seen a slight decline in gas demand as people leave the area and
customers scale back operations. The volume of gas burned by oil
sands companies may shrink by 150 million to 300 million cubic feet a
day, according to New York consulting firm Pira Energy Group.
“The
wildfires southwest of Fort McMurray have caused significant output
reductions in the oil sands, which will have some gas demand and
site-related power load implications,” said John Ell, senior
natural gas analyst at Pira Energy Group in New York. “There’s
potential for a two- to three-week production decrease until crews
are able to return safely to their respective facilities, once given
the all clear.”
Suncor,
Nexen
The
cogeneration plant at Suncor Energy Inc.’s MacKay River oil sands
complex was supplying a single megawatt on Thursday, down from as
much as 177 megawatts earlier this week, data from the Alberta
Electric System Operator show. Output from Suncor’s 473-megawatt
Firebag plant dropped to 81 MW early Friday. Flows from a
220-megawatt plant at a site run by Cnooc Ltd.’s Nexen that had
been falling since last weekend reached zero on Thursday.
Both
of the companies are among those that have halted or curtailed
production in the region, based on company statements. A shutdown at
Royal Dutch Shell Plc’s oil sands operations has also contributed
to the declines, Ell said.
“If
we see less power hitting the grid that means the facility is slowing
down,” Het Shah, a Bloomberg New Energy Finance gas analyst, said
by e-mail.
The
fires may threaten nearby electric transmission lines between Fort
McMurray and southern Alberta, Ell said. Nearby, two regional Fort
McMurray lines are out of service, reducing the area’s grid
reliability and stability, he said Friday.
Spot
natural gas at a hub in Alberta fell 3.6 percent on Thursday to $1.07
per million British thermal units, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
It had closed at a nearly seven-week high a day earlier.
(Updates
with flow data from second paragraph.)
Canadian Crude Prices Surge as Fire Hits Shell, Suncor Output
6
May, 2016
(Bloomberg)
-- The worst wildfire in Alberta history is boosting Canadian crude
prices as oil companies evacuate workers and shut in as much as 1
million barrels a day of output.
Western
Canadian Select, the benchmark for oil sands production, strengthened
$1 to an $11.85-a-barrel discount to U.S. West Texas Intermediate on
Thursday, the narrowest spread since July, data compiled by Bloomberg
show. The absolute price rose $1.54 to $32.47 a barrel.
Suncor
Energy Inc., Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Husky Energy Inc. are among
companies that shut plants or reduced production. Cnooc Ltd.’s
Nexen, ConocoPhillips, Imperial Oil Ltd. and Statoil ASA were
also affected. The shutdowns follow supply disruptions in places like
Nigeria and Iraq earlier this year that have helped global prices
rebound from a 12-year low.
“Implications
could stretch beyond the border of Canada,” said Wood MacKenzie
Ltd. analyst Afolabi Ogunnaike, who projects output could be
curtailed as much as 700,000 barrels a day because of the blaze. “It
should strengthen the price for Bakken” crude in North Dakota, he
said.
Between
900,000 and 1 million barrels a day of oil sands production may be
offline because of the blaze, equal to 35 to 38 percent of the 2.6
million barrels a day average output forecast for this year, Royal
Bank of Canada said in a report Thursday. The cut is almost equal to
Algeria’s daily production in April, data compiled by Bloomberg
show. Alberta oil sands production was about 2.5 million barrels a
day in February, according to the province’s oil regulator.
Stockpile Buffer
The
province’s high crude inventories will be able to cover any
production losses from the Fort McMurray fires, Marcus Waldner,
Genscape Inc.’s manager for oil storage, said in an e-mail.
According to Genscape, stocks totaled 26.5 million in Alberta
Heartland, Edmonton, Hardisty and Kerrobert for the week ended April
29, up about 4 million barrels from a year earlier.
Most
major oil sands sites that are near Fort McMurray are concentrated to
the north while the fire is to the south. Most of the shutdowns are
to allow “workers to deal with personal problems” related to
evacuations, Andrew Leach, associate professor of business at the
University of Alberta, said in a phone interview.
Production
Sites
Should
the fire get near oil sands sites, “there is certainly
infrastructure that is close enough to trees that it could be
affected” he said, mentioning drilling pads.
The
fire has caused the evacuation of more than 80,000 people in Fort
McMurray, the town at the heart of the Athabasca deposit, one of
three large bitumen reserves that make up Alberta’s oil sands.
Shell
shut its 255,000 barrel-a-day Albian Sands mine. Suncor said it
brought down its base plant along with its Firebag and MacKay River
oil sands operations, shutting in about 300,000 barrels a day.
Syncrude Canada Ltd. said its upgrader was running at “minimum
levels.” Imperial Oil Ltd. reduced production at its Kearl oil
sands and Statoil ASA cut Leismer output by 50 percent.
Nexen
shut its Long Lake facility and ConocoPhillips brought down its
Surmont operations, the companies said on their websites. Connacher
Oil and Gas Ltd. was restoring normal production Thursday after
reducing about 4,000 barrels a day of output at its Great Divide
project Wednesday.
Pipeline
Disruptions
Husky
cut production at its Sunrise facility to 10,000 barrels a day from
30,000, company Spokesman Mel Duvall said.
Nexen
had already halted its 72,000 barrel-a-day upgrader and had reduced
bitumen extraction after a Jan. 15 explosion. Companies including
Suncor and Syncrude were performing maintenance turnarounds at their
sites prior to the fire, reducing output.
Pipelines
also came down. Enbridge Inc. said it shut lines out of the Cheecham
terminal. Inter Pipeline Ltd. restored its Polaris system and said
its Corridor system was ready to go after curtailing operations the
day before.
The
shutdowns reduced output from upgraders, pushing up synthetic crude
prices by $1.34 to $46.12. Relative to WTI, it was 80 cents stronger
at a $1.80 premium.
Disruptions
ranging from pipeline attacks to field shutdowns in places like
Nigeria, Iraq and Libya have taken 800,000 barrels a day of crude
supply offline this year, according to energy-industry consultant
FGE. That’s helped global benchmark Brent rally about 60 percent
from a 12-year low in January.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-04-29/unmasking-the-men-behind-zero-hedge-wall-street-s-renegade-blog
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