Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Petroleum Supply Monthly
Although
overall U.S. crude oil imports have been declining since 2005, crude
oil imports from Canada have been increasing. As of August, Canada
provided 45% of all crude oil imports to the United States, almost three
times as much as all Persian Gulf countries combined.
The United
States has been the primary destination for Canada's crude oil exports
since the early 2000s. Based on data through the first half of this year
from Canada's National Energy Board, 99% of Canada's crude oil exports
were sent to the United States. More than half of these volumes went to
petroleum refineries in the Midwest (Petroleum Administration for
Defense District, PADD 2).
Import data from the U.S. Department of
Commerce specify the nearest port of entry but not the mode of transit
used to import this crude oil. Based on entry port data and pipeline
locations, it is reasonable to expect that most of these imports came
through pipeline systems such as Enbridge Mainline, Kinder Morgan Trans
Mountain, Spectra Express, and TransCanada Keystone. A smaller portion,
about 3%, was transported by rail.
Within the United States, the
regional destination of crude oil sent by rail is different from other
modes of shipping crude oil. While about 65% of Canadian crude oil
imports by pipeline and other modes not including rail are shipped to
refineries in the U.S. Midwest (PADD 2), imports from Canada by rail go
primarily to Gulf Coast (PADD 3) and East Coast (PADD 1) refineries.
The
United States first imported crude oil by rail from Canada in October
2010, with the first full year of shipments by rail totaling 2,000
barrels per day (b/d) in 2011. Rail shipments continued to increase
through 2014, when they reached 140,000 b/d, but they have decreased in
2015. Because transporting crude oil by rail is generally more expensive
than transporting it by pipeline, rail is used only when appropriate
cost differentials exist or where pipeline infrastructure is
insufficient.
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Petroleum Supply Monthly. Note: Data for 2015 are through August.
Principal contributors: Arup Mallik, Mic
http://www.theenergycollective.com/todayinenergy/2290385/total-us-crude-oil-imports-fall-canadas-import-supply-share-rises
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