Pipeline bottlenecks push Canadian oil price to deepest discount in 4 years - Action News
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Pipeline bottlenecks push Canadian oil price to deepest discount in 4 years

The price gap between the price of Canada's oil benchmark versus its U.S. equivalent, West Texas Intermediate, has widened to its biggest difference in almost four years, with Canadian crude is now selling at a $25 discount.

Canadian oil selling for just $30 a barrel, even as West Texas Intermediate nears twice that price

Bottlenecks and shutdowns on oil pipelines have pushed Canadian oil prices to their deepest discount against U.S. prices in almost four years. (Daniel Acker/Bloomberg)

The price gap between the price of Canada's oil benchmark versus its U.S. equivalent, West Texas Intermediate, has widened to its biggest difference in almost four years, with Canadian crude now selling at a $25 discount.

The heavy oil coming out of Alberta's oilsands is known Western Canada Select. It usually trades at a discount to the better known U.S. benchmark, West Texas Intermediate, in part because it is more difficult to process.

But this week, the gap expanded to more than $25 US a barrel, due to transport bottlenecks on pipelines and by rail.

Most Canadian oil is shipped down to refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast to be refined into usable products like gasoline, diesel and jet fuel. That means Canadian producers have to compete with U.S. shale oil companies, who also sell to those same refineries and don't have nearly the same level of transportation headaches to deal with.

TransCanada'sKeystone pipeline was shut for several weeks after a spill last month, and rival Enbridge said this week it plans to ration its capacity on a key oil pipeline between Edmonton and Wisconsin by one fifth this month.

At the same time, shipments of crude by rail are inching higher, but are still lower than they were several years ago.

The transportation bottlenecks are putting the squeeze on Canadian oil. "We have a lot of oil in the oilsands," saidConorBill, managing director ofMount AuburnCapital Corp., "and the problem is there aren't a lot of ways to get that crude out of the area where it's produced."

The supply imbalance is especially vexing considering the price of WTI has been on a run lately, ever since an OPEC deal last month to maintain production cuts. The WTI price is up by 33 per cent since June, and a barrel of U.S. oil was changing hands at $56.81 on Wednesday.

Contrast that with a barrel of Western Canada Select, which can be had for just $31.72 US on Wednesday. That's a gap of $25 a barrel the widest seen since 2013, before the price of oil collapsed.

"Producers with access to international markets are earning higher receipts," saidShane Thomson, a foreign exchange trader with Cambridge Global Solutions. "The Canadian economy is not seeing the full benefit of the increase in global prices."

Instead of higher prices, Canadian producers are having to cut their prices to get their product to market. "You need to cut the price in order to incur the costs to ship it out of there," Bill told the CBC's On The Money on Tuesday.

The price gap could stick around a while longer, since transportation issues show no signs of easing any time soon.

"It will continue," Bill said.