Earlier this month, the price discount for Western Canadian Select (WCS) versus WTI at Cushing blew out to more than $30/bbl — 2.5x what’s typical and a signal that something was seriously out of whack. Well, it turns out that several things were — and to some degree still are — off-kilter, combining to drive down the price of Western Canada’s benchmark heavy-oil blend to its lowest levels relative to WTI in four years. The culprits? Everything from renewed pipeline constraints to a deadly refinery fire in Ohio to the aftereffects of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, including releases from the U.S.’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR). In today’s RBN blog, we discuss the recent ups and downs in WCS pricing and the prospects for WCS-WTI differentials to return to a more normal range in the weeks to come. (Hint: This roller-coaster ride ain’t over.)

Roundabout! - Canada-To-Rockies Crude Flows Reshaping The PADD 4 Guernsey Market

Canadian crude output is rising, requiring new export routes. As traditional pathways face constraints, the U.S. Rockies—especially the Guernsey, WY hub—are emerging as key corridors for moving Canadian heavy crude to downstream markets, including the Gulf Coast.

Even with Western Canada’s extraordinary hydrocarbon reserves, it seems it’s never a walk in the park for producers of conventional oil and bitumen there. As production in the Alberta oil sands in particular grew quickly through the 2010s, the pipelines that transport most of that supply south to U.S. markets filled up. That forced some midstream companies to apportion access to their pipelines and prompted many producers and shippers to turn to more expensive crude-by-rail as an alternative delivery method. Pipeline constraints and increased use of rail crushed prices for WCS and other regional blends — by the fall of 2018, the spread between WCS at Hardisty and WTI prices had ballooned to more than $40/bbl (dashed navy oval in Figure 1). In January 2019, Alberta’s provincial government implemented a production cap to ease takeaway constraints and shrink the WCS-WTI price spread. The differential did return to earth (within a few bucks of $12/bbl) and as it did, production curtailments were eased through the remainder of 2019 and into 2020 (dashed green oval). Of course, just as it seemed that things were normalizing, along came a once-in-a-century pandemic, sharply reducing demand for oil and spurring nearly 1 MMb/d in production cuts in Western Canada as a whole — the vast majority of them occurring in Alberta. The only good news was that as production fell, pipeline constraints evaporated and crude-by-rail volumes dropped to their lowest level in years.

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About the song

“Roller Coaster” was written by Michael Carter and Cole Swindell. It appears as the fourth song on Luke Bryan’s fourth studio album, Crash My Party. Released as a single in July 2014, it went to #1 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart and #43 on the Billboard Hot 100 Singles chart. It has been certified 2x Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Luke Bryan's merchandise manager, Cole Swindell, and his guitarist and bandleader, Michael Carter, wrote the song about the Miracle Strip Amusement Park in Panama City, FL, a place where they and Bryan had spent a lot of time in their youth. Personnel on the record were: Luke Bryan (lead vocals), J.T Corenflos and Kenny Greenberg (electric guitar), Ilya Toshinsky and Tom Bukovac (acoustic guitar), Mike Brignardello and Jimmie Lee Sloas (bass), Mike Johnson and Russ Pahl (steel guitar), Joe Spivay (fiddle), Shannon Forrest (drums), Mike Rojas and Charlie Judge (keyboards), and Perry Coleman, Tania Hancheroff and Jennifer Wrinkle (backing vocals). 

Crash My Party was recorded in August 2013 at Capitol Studios in Nashville with Jeff Stevens producing. It was released the same month and went to #1 on both the Billboard Top Country Albums and Billboard 200 Albums charts. It has been certified 4x Platinum by the RIAA. Six singles were released from the LP. 

Luke Bryan (Thomas Luther Bryan) is an American country music singer, songwriter and television personality. He began his professional career by writing songs for Travis Tritt and Billy Currington before signing as an artist with Capitol Nashville in 2007. Bryan has released seven studio albums, six compilation albums, eight EPs and 32 singles, 28 of which went to #1 on the Billboard country music charts. He has won five ACM Awards, six American Music Awards, five CMA Awards and five CMT Awards. From 2018 to the present, Bryan has served as a judge on the American Idol television talent show. He still records and tours and is currently on his Raised Up Right Tour in the U.S. He starts a two-week residency at the Theatre at Resorts World Casino in Las Vegas in November 2022. 

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Comments

I read today's blog with interest. It was a good update, but I was surprised that it didn't refer to Robert Auer's blog on July 5 that was entitled "Glory Days - Is IMO 2020'S Relevance For Crude Oil Markets Making A Comeback?". That blog discussed the probable impact of IMO 2020 on widening heavy oil diffs including the WCS diff, so it would seem pretty relevant to today's blog.
 

In reply to by Ian MacLean

Thanks for being a reader, and your point is well-taken - it probably should have been mentioned. 

Also, we've never actually had anybody suggest we had too few call backs in our blogs.