Clogged oil arteries slow US shale rush to record output

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GUERNSEY, WYOMING: A gallon of gasoline that allows a driver on the US East Coast to travel about 25 miles has already navigated thousands of miles from an oil field to one of the world’s largest fuel markets.

If its last stop is one of the region’s struggling refineries – an increasingly unlikely prospect – the crude used to produce the gas would have probably arrived by tanker from West Africa.

That’s because the region’s five plants have no pipeline access to US shale fields or Canada’s oil sands.

Or the journey to an East Coast gas pump might start instead in North Dakota’s Bakken shale fields – which means it could take up to three months, including a stop at a Gulf Coast refinery.

The same trip would have been even longer a month ago, before the opening of the controversial Dakota Access Pipeline.

That line was nearly derailed last year by protesters.

Its arduous path to approval provides one case study in the oil industry’s struggle to open up a bottleneck holding back resurgent domestic oil production – an outmoded US distribution system.

The equally divisive Keystone XL pipeline provides a more poignant example: First proposed in 2008 to connect Canada’s oil sands to Gulf Coast refineries, the line may now never get built – despite the enthusiastic backing of US President Donald Trump.

As permitting dragged on for years, oil prices crashed, dimming the prospects for investment in the oil sands.

Top firms have since written down or sold off billions of dollars in Canadian production assets and decamped for US shale fields.

Pipeline construction often lags production booms by years – if proposed lines are built at all – because of opposition from environmentalists and landowners, topographic obstacles, and permitting and construction challenges.

That forces drillers to limit output or ship oil domestically, usually by rail – which is more costly and arguably less safe.

The crimped production, in turn, costs the economy jobs, keeps prices higher for consumers and stymies the nation’s long-held geopolitical goal of reducing dependence on foreign oil.

Obstacles to pipeline construction are coming into sharp focus as resurgent shale firms, after a two-year downturn, are now on pace to take domestic crude oil output to a record in 2018, surpassing 10 million barrels per day (bpd), according to the US Energy Department.

That would top the previous peak in the early 1970s and challenge Russia and Saudi Arabia for the title of top global producer.

To transport all that oil from central shale regions such as Texas and North Dakota to the East Coast, the US relies largely on pipelines built decades ago.

The industry has retooled many old oil arteries, and the resulting patchwork often offers a convoluted route.

“It’s a hodge-podge way of doing it,” said Tricia Curtis, oil analyst at Petronerds, a consultancy based in Denver.

US Interior Minister Ryan Zinke wants the nation to become the dominant global energy player, and is considering opening more federal lands – such as national parks and Native American reservations – to fossil fuel development.

He also aims to lift restrictions on offshore drilling.

That’s a new twist on achieving “energy independence,” an elusive, almost mythical goal that’s been a standby of US political dialogue over the half century since Richard Nixon was president.

Surging shale has reduced import dependence, but achieving anything approaching “independence” would require an overhaul of the nation’s pipeline network – including construction of the kind of projects that face bleak prospects because of political opposition and geographic realities.

About half of US petroleum consumption is on the East and West Coasts, while the large expanse in the middle of the country accounts for 93 per cent of crude output in the lower 48 states.

The challenges to building new pipelines are likely to keep the East and West Coast markets – where most Americans live – dependent on imported oil, said Doug Johnson, vice president at Tallgrass Energy Partners, which operates pipelines and storage facilities in the central and western United States.

The Rocky Mountains makes construction to much of the West Coast impossible, as does difficult topography and dense population on the East Coast.

“Moving new pipelines through those areas is very, very challenging,” Johnson said.

Tallgrass’s Pony Express line kicks off in Guernsey, Wyoming, a small town of 1,000 near the historic Oregon Trail Ruts.

It’s one small example of the industry’s history of repurposing old lines.

Originally built as a crude line in 1954, it was converted to a natural gas line in 1997, then changed back into a crude line in 2014. — Reuters