We stopped using this site as an ongoing blog a few years ago.
Much of our content has since migrated to X/Twitter
Our major thematic reports are on Substack
A sample of a recent Substack report is below
Desulphurisation capacity constraints will limit TMX flows to US West Coast
After numerous delays, cost overruns and regulatory wrangles, the Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion (TMX) is finally poised to commence operation in May. It will provide an additional 590 kbpd of egress for Western Canadian crude, paralleling the existing 300 kbpd Trans Mountain Pipeline (TMP) from Alberta to British Columbia. This is a welcome a relief for Canadian producers, who have long sought an alternative to the US Midwest and US Gulf Coast refiners that dominate current exports.
Even before the first barrel flows, the start-up of TMX has prompted a vigorous debate in the tanker markets about where the crude will land. Given the heavy/sour quality of TMX crude, the only viable destinations are those refineries with coking and other resid upgrading capacity, and even these will need to contend with the crude’s high acidity. As a practical matter, this means China and the US West Coast (USWC), although media coverage has tilted towards the USWC as the most frequently-mentioned sure thing. Refinery desulphurisation constraints, however, should limit the amount of TMX crude that USWC refiners can take, sending the balance to Asia.
Read more