Plains All American LP on Aug. 3 raised its 2022 profit forecast for the second time this year, and said it expects strong demand on its pipelines carrying U.S. shale oil to the Gulf Coast.
The pipeline operator increased full-year adjusted earnings guidance by $100 million to about $2.38 billion, as it expects higher crude and natural gas liquids volumes.
U.S. crude oil has been in high demand in international markets with WTI crude trading at a discount to globally-traded Brent crude, making purchases attractive to foreign buyers.
U.S. light sweet crude, a bulk of which is produced in the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico, also has been snapped up in Europe with buyers looking to replace Russian barrels.
“The marginal demand right now is the international [market],” said Jeremy Goebel, Plain’s chief commercial officer. Prices at the Corpus Christi, Texas, export hub are selling at a premium to Houston and other export ports.
“Right now, Corpus [Christi] is the best price with low inventories and high prices,” he said.
Plains has two key long-haul pipelines, Cactus and Cactus II, which move oil from the Permian basin to Corpus Christi.
Plains CEO Willie Chiang also said he expects more volumes to reach its long-haul pipelines as production in the Permian basin ramps up.
Average daily crude oil volumes in the second quarter rose 30% on its Permian Basin pipelines, Plains said, with oilfield activity trending about 10% above its initial expectations.
Its shares rose 3.6% in after-hours trading on Aug. 3 to $11.19.
Larger pipeline rival Magellan Midstream Partners LP gave a similar view last week, saying Permian volumes on its Longhorn and BridgeTex pipelines to Houston declined as shippers likely moved barrels to the international market.
Plains’ adjusted second quarter net income allocated to common unitholders rose 29% to $210 million.
Recommended Reading
Asia Spot LNG at 3-month Peak on Steady Demand, Supply Disruption
2024-04-12 - Heating demand in Europe and production disruption at the Freeport LNG terminal in the U.S. pushed up prices, said Samuel Good, head of LNG pricing at commodity pricing agency Argus.
Texas LNG Export Plant Signs Additional Offtake Deal With EQT
2024-04-23 - Glenfarne Group LLC's proposed Texas LNG export plant in Brownsville has signed an additional tolling agreement with EQT Corp. to provide natural gas liquefaction services of an additional 1.5 mtpa over 20 years.
Exclusive: Chevron Balancing Low Carbon Intensity, Global Oil, Gas Needs
2024-03-28 - Colin Parfitt, president of midstream at Chevron, discusses how the company continues to grow its traditional oil and gas business while focusing on growing its new energies production, in this Hart Energy Exclusive interview.
Midstream Builds in a Bearish Market
2024-03-11 - Midstream companies are sticking to long term plans for an expanded customer base, despite low gas prices, high storage levels and an uncertain political LNG future.
Exclusive: Renewables Won't Promise Affordable Security without NatGas
2024-03-25 - Greg Ebel, president and CEO of midstream company Enbridge, says renewables needs backing from natural gas to create a "nice foundation" for affordable and sustainable industrial growth, in this Hart Energy Exclusive interview.