OGJ -- Analysts: US crude export capacity can handle pipeline surge .....................
  03/29/2019 
  Analysts: US crude export capacity can handle pipeline surge
  By Bob Tippee  Editor, Oil & Gas Journal 
  As  oil pipelines come online in the Permian basin, will the bottleneck  depressing wellhead prices just move to Gulf Coast export terminals?
  No, according to a Mar. 29 research note from Cowen Equity Research.
  Last  year, the price of West Texas Intermediate crude at Midland, Tex.,  sagged well below that of WTI at Cushing, Okla. But the discount has  disappeared, the US Energy Information Administration reported on Mar.  26.
  EIA cited recent additions to Permian takeaway capacity totaling 320,000 b/d.
  WTI-Midland still sells at a discount to the Magellan East Houston marker, but the spread has narrowed to $7/bbl.
  Congestion relief thus moves toward the Gulf Coast, awaiting incremental pipeline capacity downstream of Cushing.
  Then the question becomes export capacity.
  In  their Mar. 29 note, Cowen analysts Jason Gabelman, Ben Varga, and Dilya  Safine say the US has shipped as much as 3.5 million b/d of crude from  the Gulf Coast for 1 week. Over the last 4 weeks, shipments have  averaged 3.1 million b/d.
  At least 2.1 million b/d of Permian  pipeline capacity will start between now and year-end 2020, the analysts  say, allowing incremental new production and an additional 1 million  b/d in 2021.
  Because US refiners are near their collective ability to run light crude, they say, “that production will need to be exported.”
  The analysts modeled Gulf Coast export capacity port by port, incorporating construction plans and Clipperdata shipment records.
  “We  estimate there is about 1 million b/d of available USGC shipping  capacity presently, which should grow to 1.5 million b/d by year-end  2019,” they say. “That compares to an estimated 700,000 b/d demand for  that capacity by year-end 2019 and 900,000 b/d by mid-2020 ahead of new  export facilities starting up.”
  While the analysts expect no export bottleneck, they say “there could be growing pains along the way.”
  Not  long ago, no one worried about US capacity to export crude. That  analysts must do so now reflects national interests served by an oil  production renaissance.
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