On Tuesday, January 22nd 2013 Governor Dave Heineman of Nebraska
signed the recommendation to the U.S. Department of State for a Presidential
Permit for the Keystone XL pipeline to cross the international boarder. This
was expected after the Nebraska state regulators recommended approval of the new
route for the Keystone XL Pipeline on January 4th 2013. The
recommendation is in support of the TransCanada second application for a Presidential Permit to build the northern most section of the Keystone XL
pipeline (Phase IV) from the Canadian Border from where Saskatchewan meets
Nebraska along this new route through Nebraska that would join up with the
Keystone Phase II which runs from Steel City, Nebraska to Cushing, Oklahoma.
The new route avoids many of the fragile soils in northern Nebraska and the
shallowest areas of the Ogallala Aquifer, but still overlies portions of the
aquifer, which covers most of the state.
There is currently a pipeline that runs east from
Hardesty Saskatchewan to Manitoba and then south through the Dakotas to Steel
City, Nebraska. It is a less direct route and is a lower volume pipeline. The
existing Keystone Pipeline, is known as Phase I and run from Hardesty, Canada
to Steel City, Nebraska near the Kansas and Nebraska border. Keystone Phase II
runs from Steel City to Cushing, Oklahoma where it still terminates, leaving
the Canadian crude oil in Oklahoma along with U.S. domestic production
from North Dakota that has been using the pipeline to reach the Oklahoma
storage facilities. Increased U.S. oil production combined with the Canadian
production has produced a glut of oil waiting to be refined in Cushing, OK.
In February 2012 TransCanada announced their intention to
build the Cushing Oklahoma to the Nederland, Texas portion of the Keystone XL pipeline, the
Keystone Phase III, a 435 mile extension of the existing Keystone pipeline to
Port Arthur and Houston areas. The Keystone Phase III Project (Oklahoma to
Texas) began construction last summer and planned to begin operations in mid to
late 2013. In response to the glut of oil in Cushing, Enbridge Inc. and
Enterprise Products Partners owners of the Seaway pipeline that runs from the
gulf coast area to Cushing, Oklahoma, reversed the flow in their gas pipeline
to move crude from Cushing to the gulf coast refineries. The reversal and change to crude required pump station
additions and modifications, and was up and running in mid 2012, the capacity
of the reversed Seaway Pipeline is up to 150,000 barrels of oil per day.
According to the TransCanada the Keystone XL will also transport
U.S. crude oil from the very large Bakken oil basin in Montana and North
Dakota, along with Canadian oil, to U.S. refineries. TransCanada expects the
cross border permit to be processed expeditiously and a decision made now that
a new route in Nebraska has been approved by state regulators and endorsed by
the Governor. This is alternative route for Keystone XL Phase IV will now be submitted as part of the Presidential Permit application. Though, it seems
doubtful that the application will be approved any time soon.
The Keystone XL Pipeline has been very controversial.
Most of the environmental controversy has seemed to focus on the vulnerability
of the porous soils of the
Sandhills and fears of a possible oil leak into one of the nation's most
important agricultural aquifers. Moving the pipeline away from the Sandhills
should mitigate that concern. However, many who oppose the Keystone XL pipeline
want to prevent the development of the oil sands resources in Canada to prevent
the acceleration of global warming. The Canadian oil sands have been known for
decades, but until oil prices rose and technology improved these oil deposits
were too expensive to exploit beyond the limited scope of surface mining which
could reach only about 8% of the oil sands. Advances in technology in both oil
sand extraction and refining techniques and rising oil prices altered the
economics and have made the in-situ extraction of oil sand possible. Using Steam
Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) combined with horizontal drilling has allowed
for in-situ extraction of the oil. These advances in extraction techniques have
quadrupled recoverable oil reserves and moved Canada into second place in
proved world oil reserves, it requires more energy to produce the oil and
increases the carbon footprint of the crude as compared to oil from the Middle
East or Brazil.
The current method of mining the Canadian oil sands
increases the CO2 released in every gallon of gas adding to man’s carbon
footprint. In addition, older methods of mining the oil sands left open pits
that still need to be reclaimed, thought today groups of wells are typically
drilled off a central pad and like fracking wells and can extend for miles in
all directions. This reduces surface disturbances of the land and the footprint
of the area to be reclaimed. Canada’s Imperial Oil just started operations at another
new oil sands site, Kearl,
producing another 110,000 barrels
per day of bitumen. This bitumen doesn’t need to be refined. It goes straight
to the pipeline, but in general, refining capacity and pipeline capacity are not
keeping up with the production of Canadian crude and the price has fallen to
the lowest in the world.
The Keystone XL is planned to initially transport of
830,000 barrels a day which will be ultimately expanded to 1.3 million barrels
a day of oil, to be processed in the oil refineries along the Gulf Coast and in
Oklahoma. The Keystone XL Phase IV pipeline could be completed by
the end of 2014 if they received the Presidential permit this spring. In 2011 for the
first time since 1949 the U.S. exported more petroleum products than it
imported. The United States remained a
net importer of crude oil, some of which was refined into petroleum products
that were then exported. The increase in exported distillate fuel (mostly
diesel) is what allowed the U.S. to become a net exporter of petroleum
products.
American
refiners still imported large, although declining, amounts of crude oil from
Canada, which in 2011 topped 2 million bbl/d for the first time, and from North
Dakota's Bakken formation to process into petroleum products. According to the U.S. Energy Information
Agency, the U.S. consumed 18.8million barrels per day of petroleum products during 2011, making us the world's
largest petroleum consumer. Current imports are 8.4 million barrels a
day and Canada supplied the
largest share of these petroleum imports. The next biggest sources of U.S.
petroleum imports in 2011 were Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, and Nigeria, in
that order. Overall, about 40% of U.S. petroleum imports came from countries in
the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), while 60% came
from non-OPEC countries such as Canada, Mexico, Russia, and Brazil. Most ofthese petroleum imports were crude oil.
In June 2010 TransCanada commenced commercial operation
of the first phase of the Keystone Pipeline System. Keystone's Phase I was the
conversion of natural gas pipeline to crude oil pipeline and construction of a
bullet line that brings the crude oil non-stop from Canada to Steel City at
435,000 barrels a day. Phase II of Keystone was an extension of the pipeline
from Steele City, Nebraska to Cushing, Oklahoma and began operations in
February 2011. Keystone Phase II increased the volume per day of Keystone Phase
I with the addition of pumping stations; the system now runs at 591,000 barrels
a day. The Seaway pipeline began operations in June completing the
ability to pipe crude from Canada to the Gulf Coast carrying 150,000 barrels a
day. The Keystone Phase III when completed in 2013 will increase volume in the
Oklahoma to Texas portion of the pipeline. The Keystone Phase IV when and if
approved will increase volume of the upper portion of the pipeline from the
current 591,000 barrels a day to 1.3
million barrels a day.
The Canadian pipeline, known as the Northern
Gateway, is a 730 mile route from Alberta where the oil is produced to the
Pacific port of Kitmat, for export to Asia. In order to reach the port the pipeline must travel
through British Columbia (the California of Canada) and is facing strong public
opposition and the political leaders in British Columbia offer no support.
Economic Benefit to British Columbia would be minimal. The Northern Gateway
would open a potentially large new market for Canadian crude by taking oil over
the Rockies to Kitimat, British Columbia, where it could be loaded onto tankers
bound for China and other Asian markets. Due to the current excess in supply in
the United States, the price of West Texas Intermediate crude has fallen and
the price of the Canadian crude has fallen even more to near $50 per barrel due
to a lack of capacity to refine the heavier crude. The Northern Gateway could reduce that price
differential somewhat and is being proposed to carry 525,000 barrels of crude a
day. If it wins approval, Enbridge expects it to be up and running in 2017.
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