Generic Hero BannerGeneric Hero Banner
Latest market news

Companies race to build US crude export capacity

  • Market: Crude oil, Oil products
  • 16/09/19

The race to build new offshore docks to handle the rising flow of US crude exports is on and speed is of the essence. Only the first few projects to be permitted and sanctioned are likely to get built.

The prize for Enterprise Products Partners, Phillips 66 and about eight others looking to build these offshore ports along the US Gulf coast will be the ability to fully load Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCC). That's because VLCCs offer the economies of scale needed to deliver US crude to farflung destinations like China and India.

The lead times for the projects are many years — meaning they will not have any impact on the ability of US crude to reach overseas in the short-term, as markets reel from the weekend attacks on Saudi Arabian crude production and processing. But they will play a role continuing to build on the US' role as a major supplier to global oil markets.

Five projects have submitted applications to the US Maritime Administration (MARAD) and the Coast Guard for the offshore projects, and at least four other projects could follow. In addition, a project on an island off the Texas coast also includes plans to fully load the supertankers, which can each carry up to 2mn bl of crude.

Some analysts predict that two or three of the VLCC offshore ports will come to fruition, including at least one off the coast of Corpus Christi and another in the Freeport area near Houston. The terminals will be key to the growth of US crude exports, which hit a record high of 3.16mn b/d in June and are already changing global markets. US exports fell to 2.69mn b/d in July, but are expected to continue in the 3mn b/d range this year.

Currently, only one US port is able to fully load a VLCC — the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (Loop) about 20 miles (32km) off the coast from Grand Isle, Louisiana.

Midstream companies, refiners, a private equity group, a port authority and a trading firm are all vying to be the second.

Enterprise, already a key player in US crude exports, has reached a final investment decision on its offshore VLCC project near Freeport after signing long-term contracts for crude transportation, storage and marine terminalling services with Chevron, a top Permian producer.

Enterprise submitted a 10,000-page application to MARAD in January for the project, dubbed the Sea Port Oil Terminal (Spot). It would include two crude pipelines, built from a shoreline crossing to a deepwater port. The offshore port would connect to two single-point mooring (SPM) buoys and would be capable of loading and exporting oil at about 85,000 bl/hour.

Stop the clock

The Spot application hit a snag in May when federal regulators temporarily suspended the timeline of the review, also known as a "stop clock" order. The procedure, which has also been applied to two other pending offshore VLCC port applications, occurs when regulators need more information or analysis.

Enterprise said the "stop clock" was expected during the year-long MARAD process and that it will not affect the project's schedule. The company expects regulatory approval in the first half of 2020 and construction will take about two years. Enterprise is bullish on US crude exports, predicting they will rise to 8mn b/d in the next few years.

Phillips 66 more recently joined the VLCC race with its own Bluewater project off the coast of Corpus Christi. The facility is expected to service 16 VLCCs per month. Phillips 66 submitted a MARAD application for the project in May.

The Port of Corpus Christi Authority is supporting the Phillips 66 project, even as it has joined forces with private equity firm the Carlyle Group on another VLCC port at Harbor Island near Aransas Pass.

The Harbor Island project is not technically an offshore project but will be able to fully load VLCCs, as it includes a privately-paid-for dredging plan to reach a channel depth of 75ft. This is a separate project from a planned Corps of Engineers dredging project that will increase the channel depth to 54ft starting at the jetties at the entrance of the ship channel to Harbor Island.

The Harbor Island VLCC project does not need a permit from MARAD and has already filed for several permits with the US Army Corps of Engineers, said Jerry Ashcorft, chief executive of Lone Star Ports, the company set up to develop the project.

Ashcroft expects that about 4mn b/d of US crude will be exported out of the Corpus Christi area within three years.

Looking more broadly at the US Gulf coast, two new VLCC projects are likely to be developed -- one in Corpus Christi and one in the Houston area -- and possibly a third depending on the status of trading with China, Ashcorft said.

Another project competing in the Corpus Christi area is Trafigura's proposed Texas Gulf Terminal, which would be off the coast of Padre Island in Texas. The trading and logistics company earlier this year submitted its application to MARAD for the project which would use a single-point mooring buoy, similar to the one used at Loop.

MARAD put a "stop clock" on that project in February, asking for more information.

Texas Gulf Terminals said last month that federal agencies routinely "stop the clock" or pause the mandated schedule in the permitting process, to ensure officials have adequate time to review materials or to allow the applicant to provide additional information.

Canadian pipeline company Enbridge and storage and terminal operator Oiltanking are proposing to build a VLCC export terminal off the coast of Freeport, in direct competition with the Enterprise proposal. The Texas Crude Offshore Loading Terminal or Colt will include an offshore platform and two offshore loading single-point mooring buoys capable of fully loading VLCCs in about 24 hours. MARAD also issued a "stop clock" on that project in part related to a plan to add a marine vapor control system to the original design and amend its application.

Enbridge said last month that Texas Colt expects to file an amended application in the fourth quarter of this year and does not anticipate a delay to the project's schedule.

One other VLCC offshore project has submitted an application to MARAD – Sentinel Midstream's Texas Gulf Link project off the coast of Brazoria County, near Freeport. The project would have export loading rates of up to 85,000 bl/hour and is expected to handle 15 VLCCs per month.

Two other VLCC offshore projects are not in the Corpus Christi or Houston areas – logistics company Jupiter's VLCC plan off the coast of Brownsville, Texas, and Tallgrass Energy's plan related to its terminal in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana.

Tallgrass said last month that it is in advanced discussions on the Plaquemines project with several counterparties that would lead to a final investment decision if consummated. The company envisions two phases of the project. The first will allow full loading of post-Panamax-sized vessels and the second would include building a separate offshore pipeline extension that would allow VLCC loading at a deep-water single point mooring.

Jupiter announced its Brownsville project last year but has not submitted an application to MARAD. The company has delayed the projected start date of its related 1mn b/d Permian crude pipeline by about six months to the first quarter of 2021.

Jupiter said in August that it has started the process to submit its MARAD permit and is also waiting for approvals from the Port of Brownsville.

Two other companies are weighing VLCC projects but have provided few specifics.

Energy Transfer said earlier this month it is negotiating with potential shippers on a VLCC project connected to its terminal in Nederland, Texas. The company said it was optimistic about the project and that it would take 2.5-3 years, including the regulatory process and construction.

Meanwhile, Flint Hills Resources last year teased a VLCC project related to an expansion of its terminal in Ingleside, near Corpus Christi. But Flint Hills, a subsidiary of Koch Industries, is now considering a sale of the terminal, leaving the related VLCC project uncertain.

Flint Hills said in August that it continues to advance the expansion project announced last year.

US Gulf Coast VLCC loading projects

Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News
28/03/25

UK EAC to explore airport expansion, net zero conflict

UK EAC to explore airport expansion, net zero conflict

London, 28 March (Argus) — UK parliament's cross-party environmental audit committee (EAC) has begun an inquiry into whether the country's airport capacity expansion could be achieved in line with its climate and environment targets. "The aviation sector is a major contributor to the UK's carbon emissions, and on the face of it, any expansion in the sector will make net zero even more elusive," EAC chair Toby Perkins said. Any expansions must meet strict climate and environment commitments, the UK government has said. The government in January expressed support for a third runway at London's Heathrow airport — the country's largest. UK transport minister Heidi Alexander said in February that she was "minded to approve" an expansion at London's Gatwick airport, ahead of a final decision in October. The expansion would involve Gatwick making its northern runway operational. It is currently only used as a back-up option. The government is also "contemplating decisions on airport expansion projects at London Luton… and on the reopening of Doncaster Sheffield," Perkins said. "It is possible — but very difficult — for the airport expansion programme to be consistent with environmental goals," Perkins said. "We look forward to exploring how the government believes this can be achieved." The UK has a legally-binding target of net zero emissions by 2050. Its carbon budgets — a cap on emissions over a certain period — are also legally binding. The government must this year set levels for the UK's seventh carbon budget , which will cover the period 2038-42. The committee has invited written submissions on the possible airport expansions and net zero, with a deadline of 24 April. It will report in the autumn. By Georgia Gratton Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Find out more
News

Oil, biofuel groups meet to align on RFS policy


27/03/25
News
27/03/25

Oil, biofuel groups meet to align on RFS policy

New York, 27 March (Argus) — Energy and farm groups met last week at the American Petroleum Institute to negotiate a joint request for President Donald Trump's administration as it develops new biofuel blend mandates, according to five people familiar with the matter. The private meeting involved groups from across the supply chain, including representatives of feedstock suppliers, biofuel producers, fuel marketers, and oil refiners with Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) obligations. The groups coordinated earlier this year around a letter to the Trump administration on the need to update the RFS and are now seeking agreement on other program elements. According to the people familiar with the matter, the groups agree on pushing the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to set higher blend mandates under the program's D4 biomass-based diesel and D5 advanced biofuel categories. Groups support slightly different volume targets that are nevertheless all in "a rounding number of each other" in the D4 category, according to one lobbyist. But there is still disagreement about whether to ramp up mandates quickly in 2026 or provide a longer runway to higher volumes. Clean Fuels Alliance America and farm groups have publicly supported a biomass-based diesel mandate of at least 5.25bn USG starting next year, which could justify a broader advanced biofuel mandate above 9bn USG, according to the people familiar, though others worry about fuel cost impacts if mandates spike so quickly. The current mandate for 2025 is 7.33bn USG in the advanced biofuels category, including a 3.35bn USG mandate for the biomass-based diesel subcategory, so the volumes being pushed for future years would be a steep increase. The RFS, highly influential for fuel and commodity crop prices, requires oil refiners and importers to blend annual amounts of biofuels into the conventional fuel supply or buy Renewable Identification Number (RIN) credits from those who do. The idea behind the groups' coordination is that the Trump administration might more quickly finalize RFS updates if lobbyists with a history of sparring over biofuel policy can articulate a shared vision of the program's future. One person familiar said the effort comes after the Trump administration directed industry to align biofuel policy goals, though others said they understood the coordination as largely voluntary. EPA did not provide comment. There is less agreement around the program's D6 conventional biofuel category, which is mostly met by corn ethanol. Oil groups have in the past criticized EPA for setting the implied D6 mandate at 15bn USG, above the amount of ethanol that can feasibly be blended into gasoline, though excess biofuels from lower-carbon categories can be used to meet conventional obligations. Ethanol interests support setting the D6 mandate even higher than 15bn USG, which could be a tough sell. The discussions to date have not involved targets for D3 cellulosic biofuels, a relatively small part of the program. A proposal to lower 2024 volumes has hurt D3 credit prices, signaling that future mandates are effectively optional, according to frustrated biogas executives , and has reduced the salience of the issue for other groups. A proposal from President Joe Biden's administration to create a new category called "eRINs" to credit biogas used to power electric vehicles has similarly not come up. "We're not expecting to see any attempt to include eRINs in this next [RFS] proposal," Renewable Fuels Association president Geoff Cooper told Argus earlier this month. The meeting last week was largely oriented around the RFS, though a National Association of Truck Stop Operators representative raised the issue of tax policy too. The group has been frustrated by the expiration of a long-running blenders credit and the introduction this year of a less generous credit for refiners, which is only partially implemented and has spurred a sharp decline in biomass-based diesel production. But others involved in negotiations, while they acknowledge tax uncertainty could hurt their case for strong mandates, are trying to avoid contentious topics and focus mostly on volumes. Republican lawmakers are separately weighing whether to keep, repeal, or adjust that credit to help out fuel from domestic crops, and there is no telling how long that debate might take to resolve. Another thorny issue discussed at the meeting is RFS exemptions for small refineries. Biofuel producers strongly oppose such waivers and say that exempted volumes should at least be reallocated among facilities that still have obligations. Oil groups have their own views, though it is unclear how involved the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers — which represents some small refiners and has generally been more critical of the RFS than the American Petroleum Institute — are in discussions. EPA is aiming to finalize new volume mandates by the end of this year , people familiar with the administration's thinking have said, though timing for a proposal is still unclear. Future conversations among energy and farm groups to solidify points of unity — and strategize around how to downplay disagreements — are likely, lobbyists said. RIN prices rally Speculation over the trajectory of the RFS, and the potential for higher future volumes, supported soybean oil futures and widened the bean oil-heating oil (BOHO) spread. The BOHO spread maintains a positive correlation with D4 RIN prices as a widening value raises demand for D4 credits as biofuel producers look to offset higher production costs. Thursday's session ended with current-year ethanol D6 credits valued between 79¢/RIN and 82¢/RIN, while their D4 counterparts held at a premium and closed with a range of 84¢/RIN to 89¢/RIN. These gains each measured more than 5.5pc growth relative to Wednesday's values. By Cole Martin and Matthew Cope Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Several countries have met fossil finance pledge: CSO


27/03/25
News
27/03/25

Several countries have met fossil finance pledge: CSO

London, 27 March (Argus) — Two-thirds of "high-income" signatories that pledged to end public finance for international fossil fuels have policies in place that realise their commitment, civil society organisation (CSO) Oil Change International said today. Of the 17 "high-income" signatories, 11 are compliant, Oil Change found. They total ten developed countries — Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the UK — as well as EU development institution the European Investment Bank (EIB). The policy details vary, "but all put a complete halt to investments in new oil and gas extraction and LNG infrastructure", Oil Change said. The pledge referred to — the Clean Energy Transition Partnership (CETP) — was launched at the UN Cop 21 climate summit in 2021. It aims to shift international public finance "from the unabated fossil fuel energy sector to the clean energy transition". Signatories commit to ending new direct public support for overseas unabated fossil fuel projects within a year of joining. Other countries have updated policy to restrict fossil fuel financing abroad, but Oil Change has deemed them not in line with the pledge made. Belgium's policy "breaches the end-of-2022 deadline, allowing support for projects that have received promise of insurance by July 2022 into 2023", Oil Change said. The Netherlands allows some projects that requested support in 2022 to be approved in 2023, while there are "energy security exemptions and exemptions for some continued support in low-income countries", Oil Change said. The CSO assessed Germany's policy as containing a number of "major loopholes", including not ruling out public finance for gas infrastructure and gas-fired power plants. And it noted that Italy's policy for its export credit agency "allows fossil fuel finance to continue virtually unhindered". Germany has provided $1.5bn across 11 projects since the 2022 deadline passed, while Italy approved nearly $1.1bn for four projects in 2023, Oil Change said. Oil Change classed Switzerland's policy as "severely misaligned", while Portugal has not submitted a policy and the US has withdrawn from the agreement. The US provided $3.7bn for 12 international fossil fuel projects between end-2022 and end-2024, while it approved $4.7bn for the Mozambique LNG project after leaving the CETP. The CETP now has 40 signatories including five development banks and 35 countries. By Georgia Gratton Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Repsol to begin Nantes bitumen terminal flows in April


27/03/25
News
27/03/25

Repsol to begin Nantes bitumen terminal flows in April

London, 27 March (Argus) — Spanish integrated Repsol plans to supply next week its first bitumen cargo to the Nantes import terminal on the French Atlantic coast. It will move a second cargo to the terminal during April. The start of these flows will coincide with the scheduled restart of the 50/50 Repsol/Moeve joint venture 1.2mn t/yr Asesa bitumen refinery. The refinery has been down since early March for planned maintenance work. The Nantes oil products terminal, including the bitumen storage facility there, has been operated by Dutch liquid bulk storage firm Chane since summer 2024, after a rebrand from its previous name Alkion Terminals. Shell ceased its bitumen cargo throughput deal into and truck supply operation from Nantes and Bayonne at the end of 2024. Repsol and Abu Dhabi-controlled Spanish energy company Moeve then struck exclusive deals to supply bitumen cargoes to Nantes and Bayonne respectively. Cepsa began exclusively using the Bayonne bitumen terminal from 1 February. Repsol has been increasingly active in bitumen export markets over the past year or so, underlined by rising cargo flows from its 135,000 b/d La Coruna and 220,000 b/d Bilbao refineries on the Spanish Atlantic coast. The Nantes terminal has three 4,000t storage tanks. One of the tanks is undergoing work and will be available for use from June. By Fenella Rhodes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

UK GHG emissions fell by 4pc in 2024


27/03/25
News
27/03/25

UK GHG emissions fell by 4pc in 2024

London, 27 March (Argus) — The UK's greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions fell by 4pc year-on-year in 2024, provisional data released by the government today show, driven principally by lower gas and coal use in the power and industry sectors. GHG emissions in the UK totalled 371mn t of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) last year, the data show, representing a fall of 54pc compared with 1990 levels. The UK has legally-binding targets to cut its GHG emissions by 68pc by 2030 and 81pc by 2035 against 1990 levels, and to reach net zero emissions by 2050. The electricity sector posted the largest proportional year-on-year fall of 15pc, standing 82pc below 1990 levels at 37.5mn t CO2e. The decline was largely a result of record-high net imports and a 7pc increase in renewable output reducing the call on coal and gas-fired generation, as well as the closure of the country's last coal power plant in September , which together outweighed a marginal rise in overall electricity demand, the government said. Industry posted the next largest emissions decline of 9pc, falling to 48.3mn t CO2e, or 69pc below 1990 levels, as a result of lower coal use across sectors and the closure of iron and steel blast furnaces. Fuel supply emissions fell by 6pc to 28.4mn t CO2e, 63pc below where they stood in 1990. And emissions in the UK's highest-emitting sector, domestic transport, fell by 2pc to 110.1mn t CO2e, 15pc below 1990 levels, as road vehicle diesel use declined. Emissions in the remaining sectors, including agriculture, waste and land use, land use change and forestry (LULUCF), edged down collectively by 1pc to 67.2mn t CO2e, some 50pc below 1990 levels. Only emissions from buildings and product uses increased on the year, rising by 2pc as gas use increased, but still standing 27pc below 1990 levels at 79.8mn t CO2e. UK-based international aviation emissions, which are not included in the overall UK GHG figures, rose by 9pc last year to reach pre-Covid 19 pandemic levels of 26.1mn t CO2e, the data show. But UK-based international shipping emissions edged down by 1pc to 6.2mn t CO2e. By Victoria Hatherick Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more