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Canadian crude exports from US Gulf Coast fall only slightly despite TMX startup

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FILE PHOTO: A drone view of three berths able to load vessels with oil is seen after their construction at Westridge Marine Terminal, the terminus of the Canadian government-owned Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, April 26, 2024. REUTERS/Chris Helgren/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A drone view of three berths able to load vessels with oil is seen after their construction at Westridge Marine Terminal, the terminus of the Canadian government-owned Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, April 26, 2024. REUTERS/Chris Helgren/File Photo

HOUSTON (Reuters) – About 150,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Canadian crude were exported from the U.S. Gulf Coast in June, slightly lower than average, despite the expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline (TMX), which pulled some barrels west to Vancouver, shipping tracking data showed.

The $24.84 billion (C$34 billion) expansion started operations in May, adding 590,000 bpd of capacity for crude deliveries to Canada’s Pacific Coast, where it can be loaded onto tankers, giving Canadian producers more access to U.S. West Coast and Asian markets.

TMX has the potential to impact global oil flows and freight rates – if more oil from Canada’s West Coast heads to Asia, it could cut shipments from the U.S. Gulf Coast to India, China and South Korea. TMX could also displace shipments of some Latin American grades to Asian countries, which would then have to hunt for a new market.

Two supertankers and two smaller vessels loaded Canada’s Access Western Blend and Cold Lake crude grades from the U.S. Gulf Coast in June for delivery to refineries in India, China, Spain and Peru, data from ship tracking services Kpler and Vortexa showed.

The 150,000-bpd exported in June compared with monthly average volumes of about 170,000 bpd in the last 12 months, according to data from Vortexa.

The ease of loading very large crude carriers (VLCCs), which can carry up to 2 million barrels of oil, at the Gulf Coast has helped maintain high levels of Canadian exports from the U.S. Gulf Coast, said Vortexa analyst Rohit Rathod.

In comparison, Aframaxes that typically transport up to 800,000 barrels are limited to loading only about 550,000 barrels at Vancouver because of port draft restrictions.

Those vessels have to sail to California to transfer the crude to a VLCC before traveling to Asia, whereas U.S. Gulf Coast VLCC loadings often occur just off Galveston.

Reliance Industries, for example, shipped 2 million barrels of Canadian crude in May from Vancouver to its refinery in Jamnagar, India. The following month, the Indian refiner loaded a supertanker off the coast of Texas for August delivery to India.

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Westbound volumes of Canadian crude on the Trans Mountain system have already ramped up by more than 300,000 bpd since TMX deliveries began in late May, energy data provider Wood Mackenzie said.

However, pipeline monitoring showed that utilization on Enbridge’s competing Mainline remained largely unchanged from pre-TMX levels through June and early July, buoyed by draining storage inventories in Western Canada, Wood Mackenzie analyst Dylan White said. The Mainline pipe moves crude from Canada’s Alberta to the U.S. Midwest.

July has already seen two loadings of 500,000 barrels of Cold Lake Blend from the U.S. Gulf Coast, according to Kpler’s ship tracking data. However, weak Chinese demand may hinder those flows, analysts noted.

“We expect a decrease in Canadian flows to Midwest and Gulf Coast will materialize in the months to come as TMX continues to ramp up and the inventory cushion in Western Canada is depleted,” White noted.

(Reporting by Arathy Somasekhar in Houston; Editing by Liz Hampton and Marguerita Choy)

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