Phillips 66 Offers Storage on Gray Oak Pipeline
NEW YORK (Reuters) — Phillips 66 Partners LP will offer shippers storage on its Gray Oak crude oil pipeline system in Texas because of an urgent need for tank space, the company said on Friday, as an oil glut in the United States worsens from a sharp falloff in fuel demand.
Crude storage space has quickly filled since the coronavirus pandemic has halted movement around the world and sharply decreased fuel demand. At the same time, a price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia has flooded the market with crude and pushed oil prices lower.
“In response to shipper demand, Gray Oak Pipeline is modifying its rules and regulations to accommodate on-system crude storage,” a Phillips 66 spokesman said in a statement. “Current events have significantly impacted demand for West Texas Crude oil, resulting in an urgent need for crude oil storage.”
Gray Oak has up to 1 million barrels of storage capacity available to shippers for WTI and WTL grades of crude oil, the statement said.
The 900,000 barrel per day (bpd) Gray Oak Pipeline is one of the biggest new pipelines shipping from the Permian Basin, the largest U.S. shale basin, to delivery points at or near the Houston Ship Channel.
Flows on the new pipeline are expected to slow greatly as the arbitrage to ship profitably from the Permian to the Gulf Coast has evaporated as prices crashed, traders said.
The on-system storage is being “offered in response to fast-developing market conditions,” Phillips 66 said separately in a filing with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, adding it would be effective on April 5.
On-system storage typically refers to ancillary storage at tank farms at a pipeline’s injection or origin points, trade sources said.
WTI Midland crude traded at a midpoint of a $4 a barrel discount to the U.S. benchmark on Friday while WTI at East Houston, or MEH, traded at a midpoint of a 50-cent discount to U.S. crude futures.
The spread between the two grades was not enough to cover most pipeline transportation costs, traders said.
Shippers wanting to use the on-system storage on Gray Oak’s system will be required to execute a separate binding agreement for that purpose, according to the filing.
Related News
Related News
- Texas Waha Hub Gas Prices Plunge to Record Lows, Hit Negative Territory
- U.S. Appeals Court Strikes Down Controversial Biden Pipeline Safety Rules
- Williams Seeks Emergency Certificate to Operate $1 Billion Mid-Atlantic Gas Pipeline After Court Reversal
- Texas Oil Pipelines Near Max Capacity, Threatening Future Export Limits
- Energy Transfer Subsidiary Selects KTJV for Lake Charles LNG Export Project
- Saudi Arabia Looking to Expand Pipeline to Reduce Oil Exports via Gulf
- Report: Houston Region Poised to Become a Global Clean Hydrogen Hub
- Texas Startup Endeavors Again to Build First Major U.S. Oil Refinery Since 1977
- Puerto Bahia, Gasco to Build Liquefied Petroleum Gas Facility in Cartagena, Colombia
- U.S. Court Overturns FERC Approval for NextDecade’s $18 Billion Rio Grande LNG Project
Comments