As
reported by Bloomberg: The oil industry is pressuring President
Barack Obama to end the 41-year-old ban on most crude exports.
BP Plc (BP/) isn’t waiting for a decision.
The
British oil giant has signed on to take at least 80 percent of the
capacity of a new $360 million mini-refinery in Houston that will
process crude just enough to escape restrictions on sales outside the
country.
Amid a
flood
of new U.S. oil, the demand for simple, one-step plants capable of
transforming raw crude into exportable products such as propane is
feeding a construction boom along the
Gulf Coast.
If the new processing units continue to multiply, they could render
moot the politically sensitive debate over whether to ease the
restrictions in place since the Arab oil embargo of 1973.
“It’s a
relatively inexpensive way around the export prohibition,” said Judith
Dwarkin, chief energy economist for ITG Investment Research Inc. “You
can lightly ruffle the hydrocarbons and they are considered processed
and then they aren’t subject to the ban.”
BP and other producers will also be able to sell the lightly refined products to a variety of domestic markets.
The first of the units, built by
Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP (KMP)
for use by BP, is scheduled to come online in July. Three additional
plants have been proposed by other pipeline or trading companies, and
refiners including
Valero (VLO)
Energy Corp. and Phillips 66 said they may follow suit. The plants,
built for 1/10 the cost of a complex, full-scale refinery, take
advantage of the law that allows products refined from oil to be sold
overseas, though not the raw crude itself without rarely granted
government permission.
Gasoline Prices
Supporters of the export ban say keeping
U.S.-produced oil at home helps lower fuel prices for industry and
consumers. Building enough mini-refineries designed for export could
have the opposite effect, said Daniel Weiss, a senior fellow at the
Center for American Progress, which supports the limits.
“It could be a way of getting around the oil ban and therefore could have an impact on the price at the pump,” he said.
Kinder Morgan, run by billionaire Chief Executive officer
Richard Kinder, expects to open the first phase of its 100,000 barrel-a-day crude processing plant in July, located along the
Houston Ship Channel. BP has signed a 10-year contract to use the facility, which is designed for further expansion.
“The export of refined products is increasingly in vogue,” Rich
Kinder told analysts on a Jan. 15 conference call for the Houston-based
company. “We’ll be able to continue to benefit from what we see is a
significant trend.”
Creating Value?
Kinder Morgan’s plant is designed to help BP in “creating more valuable products or getting to where we could
export,” said Ronald McClain, the company’s president of products pipelines.
“BP complies with all federal regulations regarding imports and exports,”
Scott Dean, a spokesman for BP, said in an e-mail response.
BP’s
American depositary receipts fell three cents to $48.79 and shares of
Kinder Morgan Inc. rose 0.3 percent to $32.29 at the close in
New York.
The
company has the ability on its pipeline network to sell products from
the Kinder Morgan plant both inside the U.S. and for export. BP lost its
access to Gulf Coast markets when it sold its 450,000 barrel-a-day
refinery in
Texas City,
Texas, to Marathon Petroleum Corp. last year. The new plant can help the company serve some of those customers.
Oil Glut
For
producers such as BP and ConocoPhillips, the plants help solve one of
the more vexing challenges of newly abundant oil in the U.S.: the more
they produce, the cheaper it gets. That’s because of energy policies
that prevent them from selling their crude to overseas markets, while
applying no such limits to products that are processed in refineries,
such as gasoline or diesel.
The result is that
refiners
so far have reaped the greatest rewards of the U.S. oil renaissance,
exporting record amounts of gasoline while the drillers who created the
boom have been forced to contend with a glut of unrefined oil and
depressed prices. New discoveries and advanced drilling techniques
helped produce more than 1 million barrels last year of a purer,
lightweight oil that’s closer to gasoline than darker, heavier crudes.
Production of the light oil, known as condensate, doubled from 2011,
according to RBN Energy LLC.
New Splitters
The glut,
in turn, is leading producers to turn to the new plants, called
splitters because they split off gassy molecules in a distillation
process that is far less complex than that of a typical refinery. The
tower-like facilities can turn the condensate into liquid fuels such as
kerosene, propane, butane, and naphtha, an ingredient in gasoline.
Refiners
including Valero and pipeline operators including Magellan Midstream
Partners LP have so far discussed plans for a dozen such plants, with
the total potential to process more than 460,000 barrels of condensate a
day -- almost half last year’s production, according to a Feb. 5 note
from analysts at
RBC Capital Markets led by
Leo Mariani.
“The
international buyers of these products will likely need to refine them
further, so this is basically a veiled form of condensate exports,”
wrote Mariani, who’s based in Austin, Texas.