by ROCKMAN » Sun 02 Jun 2013, 15:04:17
Finally some numbers that indicate the economics of the sudden turn around for east coast refiners.
“PBF Energy Inc. (PBF) is betting that shipping discounted crude by rail from Canada and North Dakota can make its East Coast refineries profitable. The refiner can unload 70,000 barrels a day of light crude and 40,000 heavy oil at its Delaware City plant, and will add 40,000 barrels a day more of heavy oil unloading capacity by the end of the year. PBF, which has the largest share of East Coast refining capacity at 28 percent, is trying to avoid the fate of other refiners who have shut or sold plants in the region. The loss of refining capacity has tightened fuel supplies near the New York Harbor, the delivery point for gasoline and heating oil futures.
Rail Cars - By the end of this year, PBF will have unloading racks in Delaware City able to take 70,000 barrels a day of light crude from the Bakken shale formation in North Dakota, 40,000 barrels a day of bitumen from oil-sands formations in Alberta, and 40,000 barrels a day of Western Canada Select, a heavy crude made by diluting bitumen. The company also has ordered 3,600 coiled and insulated rail cars to carry the heavy Canadian crude. PBF’s 182,200-barrel-a-day Delaware City refinery will run all the heavy crude brought in by train, in addition other heavy oil shipped on tankers from Mexico and Venezuela. The Bakken crude will be shared by the Delaware plant and a 185,000-barrel-a-day refinery in Paulsboro, New Jersey. The smaller crude unit at Paulsboro will run all Bakken crude. The larger crude unit will run about 100,000 barrels a day of Saudi Arab Light.
The NUMBERS
Bakken crude in Minnesota, was at a discount of $22.77 a barrel to Brent crude yesterday. It cost PBF $12.50 a barrel to ship Bakken oil by rail to the refinery. Western Canada Select cost $47.98 a barrel less than Brent yesterday. The cost to ship heavy Canadian oil by rail is about $17.50 a barrel. The Bakken shipments can replace higher-priced waterborne imports of light crude from West Africa and the east coast of Canada. In addition to the lower cost, PBF would expect to see a greater benefit to profit margins because Bakken is higher-quality crude for PBF’s system.
A side note: notice how no one is referring to the lack of the permit for the border crossing section of Keystone as even a consideration in any of these plans let alone a hindrance.