Imperial Expects TMX to Tighten Differentials, Raise Heavy Crude Prices

Imperial Expects TMX to Tighten Differentials, Raise Heavy Crude Prices

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Coming out of a record-setting production year, Imperial Oil Ltd. is expecting the completion of the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion project (TMX) in the first half of 2024 to give its Canadian barrels a bigger advantage in the market.

Imperial Oil’s upstream volumes in fourth-quarter 2023 were the highest in company history, helping the Canadian oil producer and refiner to its second-best earnings performance, executives said on a Feb. 2 earnings call.

Majority owned by Exxon Mobil Corp., Imperial saw upstream production hit 452,000 gross boe/d in the fourth quarter, the highest quarterly production in more than 30 years when adjusting for the divestment of XTO Canada, CEO Brad Corson said on the call. Full year production averaged 413,000 gross boe/d.

“This higher production for the quarter was driven by stronger performance across … major assets, and in the quarter, we saw WTI prices soften and the WTI to WCS [Western Canadian Select] differential widen,” Corson said. WCS is a heavy, sour crude compared to sweet, light WTI.

However, with the completion of the TMX expansion scheduled for completion in the first half of 2024—if all things go according to plan—Imperial expects the pipeline to provide significant additional transportation capacity and tighten WCS and WTI differentials, as well as light differentials, Corson said.


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TMX’s expected start has increased WCS’ forward curve by $6/bbl vs WTI prices in 2024, according to an East Daley Analytics Feb. 6 note. Following its completion, refiners are set to pay $20 million more per day—$1.8 billion per quarter—for Canadian imports due to the increase in WCS prices.

differentials between Western Canada Select and WTI
East Daley Analytics expects the differentials between Western Canada Select and WTI to tighten once the completion of TMX opens up access to Pacific markets. Mars (Gulf of Mexico and Maya (Mexico) are comparable heavy, sour crude. (Source: East Daley Analytics)

Major structural shift coming

“There is … a major structural shift that’s about to occur,” Corson said. “When you bring that much additional capacity onto the system, that I think will have a structural impact on heavies.”

According to East Daley, TMX will initially displace 470,000 bbl/d of heavy sour crude imports to the U.S. market and lower throughput at several pipelines and terminals.

U.S. refiners are expecting a “gut punch” once prices increase for Canadian barrels, East Daley said. Once TMX is up and running, U.S. refiners will no longer have the advantage against a WCS barrel, which is currently heavily discounted against similar quality barrels from Mexico and the Gulf of Mexico and must travel approximately 2,000 miles to the Gulf Coast in congested pipelines.

Imperial is among oil producers, including Cenovus Energy Inc. and Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., that have made up to 20-year shipping commitments on the pipeline, according to Trans Mountain’s website.