The Annual Offshore Oil & Gas Event
logo

The 26thBeijing International Offshore Oil & Gas Exhibition

ufi

BEIJING,CHINA

March 26-28,2026

LOCATION :Home> News > Industry News

If you can't pipe it, refine it: Alberta seeks oil glut solution

Pubdate:2019-01-07 17:00 Source:liyanping Click:

CALGARY (Bloomberg) -- What’s worse: Too much oil, or too much gasoline? The government of Alberta, weighing the potential of a new refinery for the province, may be on its way to finding out.

In 2018, surging crude production in the Canadian province ran into limited space on export pipelines, creating bottlenecks and sending the price of local oil to record lows relative to world benchmarks. Now Premier Rachel Notley’s government wants to see if keeping more of the oil at home with a new refinery will make a difference.

On Dec. 11, the government reported it was surveying private companies about building a new refinery. The goal: Free up space for crude on local pipelines by turning more of it into higher-value fuels such as gasoline and diesel. Analysts, though, say existing refineries in the province already produce more refined fuel than is needed.

“Its not a lot different than the issue they have with crude,” Jason Parent, V.P. of consulting at Kent Group Ltd, a downstream consultancy based in London, Ontario. “You still have to ship that product to market.”

The province will accept submissions for refinery proposals until Feb. 8 and will consider greenfield projects and expansions at existing sites. At this point, the government is only seeking a sense of the projects companies may be considering and isn’t yet ready to say how it would support those plans.

Heavy Western Canadian Select, the type of crude produced in Alberta, fell to a $50 a barrel discount to West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark. The situation became so acute that Alberta’s government announced a mandatory, province-wide 8.7% production cut to keep prices from falling further.

New oil export pipeline projects -- including TransCanada Corp.’s Keystone XL, and the expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline to the Vancouver area -- have faced environmental opposition and court-imposed delays. Even Enbridge Inc.’s Line 3 expansion, approved and scheduled to start operation in the second half of this year, is facing legal challenges from opponents.

While building more refining capacity in the province would reduce the glut of crude oil, the province’s five existing refineries already produce more refined fuels -- including gasoline, diesel and jet fuel -- than is needed. And, as with crude oil, pipeline links for refined products to markets outside Alberta are limited.

The 300,000-bopd Trans Mountain line transported 42,000 bpd of fuels to the Vancouver area for use by drivers in British Columbia. Enbridge’s Line 1 moves gasoline and diesel from Edmonton, Alberta, to third parties in Gretna, Manitoba, but none to the U.S.

Alberta is already home to Canada’s newest refinery. The North West Redwater Partnership’s Sturgeon plant, which opened in 2018, produces 40,000 bopd of diesel as well as vacuum gasoil and propane and butane. But that project only came to fruition with government loans and a commitment by Alberta to process 37,500 bopd of royalty bitumen at the plant for a toll that helps cover construction costs, which have more than doubled since the project was first proposed to $7.2 billion (C$9.7 billion) as of last year.

Building refineries in Alberta isn’t cheap. A single 100,000 bopd plant would cost between $6.9 billion and $8.6 billion versus $2.9 billion to $3.6 billion in south China, IHS Markit said in a 2017 report.

At the same time, a new refinery would compete in a North American market where fuel demand is flat or declining, and where refineries built decades ago are already supplying local markets with the fuel they need, according to Kevin Birn, IHS Markit’s director of North American crude oil markets.

"More Alberta-based refining was a no-brainer twenty or third years ago,” said Gil McGowan, president of Alberta Federation of Labor and a supporter of building more refining capacity in Alberta. "The economics are more challenging now." A new refinery would have to focus on exports, probably to Asia, he said.

Refineries would free up some space on pipelines by displacing imported condensate that’s diluted with bitumen to make the sticky oil flow, Birn said in a telephone interview. But imported condensate is already increasingly being displaced as local condensate production rises in the tight oil and gas formations of Western Canada.

Building refineries in Alberta is “not a solution to the current takeaway situation,” Birn said in a telephone interview. “By the time you get this facility on, you are looking four or five years down the line. If you can’t get your egress solved by then, you’ve got a problem.”

主站蜘蛛池模板: 狠狠噜天天噜日日噜视频麻豆| 欧美大bbbxxx视频| 一区三区三区不卡| 国产成人精品999在线观看| 欧美黑人粗硬大在线看| 99精品久久99久久久久久| 午夜精品久久久久久久久| 扒开双腿猛进湿润18p| 色欲久久久天天天综合网精品| 久久国产精品久久久久久| 国产欧美日韩一区| 日韩男人的天堂| 香港黄页亚洲一级| 久久国产乱子伦免费精品| 国产午夜无码片在线观看影院| 91制片厂(果冻传媒)原档破解| 国产精品妇女一二三区| 残虐极限扩宫俱乐部| 香蕉国产人午夜视频在线| 亚洲人成网站18禁止久久影院 | 久久99热精品这里久久精品| 国产一区免费视频| 小时代1免费观看完整版| 狠狠色丁香久久综合五月| 51视频精品全部免费最新| 亚洲国产欧美视频| 国产人与zoxxxx另类| 师尊要被cao坏了by谦野| 毛片免费观看网址| 蜜桃av噜噜一区二区三区| 97人人超人超人国产第一页| 久久综合九色综合网站| 午夜天堂精品久久久久| 国产激情视频在线播放| 成人精品一区久久久久 | 欧美老妇与禽交| 成人黄色免费网站| h成人在线观看| 久久久无码一区二区三区| 亚洲日韩在线视频| 免费看污污的网站|