Quote:
Originally Posted by swimmer_spe
Alberta has been upset that Keystone, Transmountain and Energy East pipelines have been canceled/halted, etc. All of these pipelines were to export oil from Canada. Canada does have the oil resources to be isolated from world market problems. Canada does not have the refineries to be insulated, so we must ship our oil to other countries to meet our demand.
I know that the politicians of Alberta will use this as a reason for pipelines.Maybe we should focus on ensuring we have the capacity to supply Canada with all it needs before we ship it elsewhere.
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Trans-mountain is an interesting one. It is being built. When it was clear the owners were not going to move forward with the project, the federal government purchased the operation and turned it into a crown corporation.
People in Alberta who are upset with the Liberals and federal government have a real problem with Trans-mountain. They would like to stick to the story that JT is trying to kill their industry and the feds are doing everything to destroy the industry. Trans-mountain just does not fit the narrative.
A few other things that are neat about it. So it amounts to twinning an existing pipeline. The existing pipeline feeds a small refinery in Prince George. It also feeds the Parkland refinery in Burnaby and refineries in Washington state. Not certain the current status but at one point I was told by someone in the industry that the Burnaby refinery mostly does specialty product and premium fuel with regular gas coming mostly from Washington state. To add even more complexity there is also railway cars brining in oil from Alberta.
You can also feed refined product down trans-mountain. Apparently this is a unique feature of this pipeline. As a result the pipeline also carries refined product from refineries in Edmonton to the metro Vancouver market. That feeds storage tanks around Parkands that belong other oil companies.
Next to Parklands refinery is also a marine terminal that can be either used to export or import crude or refined product.
From Parklands there is an underground pipeline to the Vancouver Airport to supply aviation fuel. YVR wanted more flexibility in supply so there is also a terminal they built on the Fraser that can accept tankers from Asia and that has an underground pipeline across Richmond to the Vancouver airport. So jet fuel can either come from domestic of foreign sources.
Vancouver Island gets most of its fuel by barge from either Parklands or the refineries in Washington state. Its terminals are generally mid island.
The key issue about all of this is resilience. Having multiple ways of getting fuel into the market is critical. This was quite evident this winter where we had severe storms that shutdown trans-mountain. The same storms also isolated Victoria from mid-island where all the fuel comes onto the island. The government had to ration fuel.
That is the complex supply chain at play in what amounts to one small corner of the country. Your going to see the same in every other part of country.
You then also have the case that in a capitalist country there is no central planning. A good example is jet fuel. So the airports in Vancouver and Toronto have some co-op that owned by the airlines that operates the fuel delivery infrastructure. Each airline is responsible for buying its own fuel and having it delivered into the airport distribution system. Air Canada is free to buy its fuel from Parkland and have it delivered to YVR, or bring it by truck from the refineries in Washington state or bring a tanker in from South Korea. It is likely going to use who ever gives it the best deal.