UPDATE: China In Talks On Canadian Oil, Rail - Canada Official
25 January 2011 - 8:19AM
Dow Jones News
Canadian National Railway Co. (CNI) and some Chinese companies
are in talks about possible exports of crude oil produced in
Canada's inland province of Saskatchewan via railway to a West
Coast port, Saskatchewan's energy and resources minister said
Monday.
"We believe this has a real potential," said the minister, Bill
Boyd. He didn't specify which ports or oil fields might be used,
adding that the discussions are at "a very early stage."
Saskatchewan--the second-largest oil-producing province in
Canada after Alberta, as of the end of 2009--has recoverable
reserves of 1.2 billion barrels of crude.
The U.S. is the major export market for Canadian crude oil.
Canada has vast deposits of oil, although nearly all its
estimated 178 billion barrels of reserves--second only to those in
Saudi Arabia--are in oil sands.
A spokeswoman for Canadian National Railway confirmed it is in
discussions with several Canadian oil producers to ship oil to West
Coast ports, possibly to refineries on the U.S. West Coast, as well
as Asia. One of Saskatchewan's largest energy producers,
PetroBakken Energy Ltd. (PBN.T, PBKEF), said it is participating in
those discussions.
"It makes good business sense to have more than one customer,"
both in terms of sales volumes and the possibility of having
stronger prices, Boyd said.
"There are a number of locations" from which crude produced in
the province could be sent by train to the Pacific coast, he said,
and this could involve building lines linking oil fields to
existing main lines. Chinese companies appear to be "very
interested in this opportunity" too, he added.
Last week, another Saskatchewan official said that a
"significant" energy deal was in the works between China and the
province.
Richard Choi, the head of Saskatchewan's trade and investment
representative office in Shanghai, said a deal could be finalized
in May. It is unclear whether that deal is related to the talks
regarding shipments of crude to the coast by rail.
The remarks from the two provincial officials follow news
Thursday that state-owned China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., or
Sinopec (600028.SH), is among a consortium of Canadian oil
producers and Asian refiners investing $100 million in Enbridge
Inc.'s (ENB, ENB.T) proposed Northern Gateway pipeline.
That project, which is awaiting approval, aims to pipe 525,000
barrels of crude oil a day from Canada's oil-sands region to a port
in British Columbia, from where it would be shipped to Asian
markets.
China, which has been investing aggressively in energy assets
globally to feed its rapidly growing economy, clearly has set its
sights on Canada.
Last year, Sinopec bought a 9% stake in Syncrude, Canada's
largest oil-sands project, for $4.65 billion, while state
investment agency China Investment Corp. bought a 45% stake in an
oil-sands project owned by Penn West Energy Trust for 817 million
Canadian dollars (US$821 million).
In 2009, PetroChina Co. (PTR) bought a majority stake in
Athabasca Oil Sands Corp. (ATH.T, ATHOF) for $1.7 billion.
Boyd and accompanying officials are touring China and Japan from
Jan. 16 to Jan. 28.
In China, Boyd met officials of China's National Development and
Reform Commission, the China National Petroleum Corp., the China
National Nuclear Corp. and China's National Energy Administration,
among others.
In Japan this week he plans to meet officials of the Japan Coal
Energy Center, Idemitsu Kosan Co. (5019.TO), Tokyo Electric Power
Co. (9501.TO), Japan Canada Uranium Co. and Overseas Uranium
Resources Development Co. The last two are joint ventures involving
Japanese utilities investing in uranium mines.
China became the world's second-largest crude-oil importer after
the U.S. in 2009, and the world's second-largest economy after the
U.S. in 2010.
It is becoming increasingly dependent on imported energy. In
2010, China imported an average of 4.81 million barrels a day of
crude oil, up 18% from the previous year.
-By Mari Iwata, Dow Jones Newswires; 813-6269-2798;
mari.iwata@dowjones.com
--Edward Welsch in Calgary contributed to this article.