The Obama administration on Tuesday bowed to months of
growing pressure over a 40-year-old ban on exports of most domestic crude,
taking two steps expected to unleash a wave of ultra-light shale oil onto
global markets.
The Bureau of Industry and Security, or BIS, which regulates
export controls, said it had granted permission to "some" companies
to sell lightly treated condensate abroad. Condensate is a form of ultra-light
crude.
Some two dozen energy companies had asked the agency for
clarification on permissible exports earlier this year, but until Tuesday those
requests had been put on indefinite hold.
The BIS also released guidance in the form of frequently
asked questions, or FAQs, to explain what kind of oil was generally allowed
under the ban, the first effort by the administration to clarify an issue that
has caused confusion and consternation in energy markets for more than a year.
The two measures are clearest signs yet that the
administration is ready to allow more of the booming U.S. shale oil production
to be sold overseas, where drillers have said it can fetch a premium of $10 a
barrel or more.
They follow a year of murky messages and widespread
uncertainty over what is or is not allowed under a trade restriction that
critics say is a relic of a bygone age, when oil was seen as scarce after the
1970s Arab oil embargo.
A domestic drilling boom of the past six years has
transformed the United States into an energy powerhouse, boosting U.S.
production by more than 50 percent and reversing decades of decline.
Output of very light oil has been especially strong, leading
to a glut that threatens to overwhelm domestic demand. The constraints helped
fuel bumper profits for refiners such as Valero Energy Corp (VLO.N) and PBF
Energy Inc (PBF.N), but angered drillers such as Hess Corp (HES.N) that say
they were selling at a discount.
Jamie Webster, the senior director of oil markets at
research firm IHS, said the FAQ "takes the leash off of (the U.S.
Department of) Commerce" and signals it may take additional action on
crude exports after several months of inaction.
While likely to draw broad support from many quarters, the
measures also open the Obama administration to attack by environmentalists and
Democrats who may see it encouraging more hydraulic fracking and as a sop to
big oil companies.
STEPS TO CLARIFY
How the measures will affect flows of condensate is
uncertain, particularly given the dramatic slump in global oil markets, where
prices have nearly halved since the summer.
An administration official said that the oil market - not a
"fairly arcane clarification" in guidelines - would ultimately
determine how much oil is exported. That echoed the Obama administration's
policy on exports of liquefied natural gas, or LNG, which are also now
generally allowed.
The steps on Tuesday were "certainly not designed to
add or detract from what can be exported. We are trying to make the boundary
line clearer," said the official.
In its FAQ, which the agency has been working on for most of
this year, the BIS confirmed or clarified a number of nuanced issues related to
the rules, including:
* Confirmation that lease condensate processed through a
distillation tower is considered a petroleum product, and therefore can be
exported without constraint.
* Clarification of what constitutes "distillation"
for export, including the fact that pressure reduction alone, and flash drums
with so-called heater-treaters or separators, would not be sufficient to
qualify oil for overseas sales.
* A reminder that most petroleum products may be
"exported to most of the world without a license," a message seen by
many analysts as blessing the process of self-certification.
* And clarification that "a minimum amount of
mixing" between exportable foreign crude and restricted domestic crude may
be allowed, a note likely making it easier to ship Canadian crude through U.S.
pipelines and ports.
FRUSTRATION BUILDING
Uncertainty about what kind of petroleum can be shipped
abroad has frustrated oil market players since the BIS, an office of the
Commerce Department, quietly gave permission in 2013 to a small company, Peaker
Energy, to export minimally treated light oil called condensate.
Last spring BIS gave permission to export treated condensate
in private letters to two other companies, Pioneer Natural Resources Co (PXD.N)
and Enterprise Products Partners LP (EPD.N).
The private nature of the communications between the
government and the three energy companies left a wide range of other drillers
in the dark about investing in expensive infrastructure to process condensate.
One company, Australia's BHP (BHP.AX), said last month it
would press ahead with exports without having received a formal approval from
the BIS, but other energy companies have been reluctant to follow suit without
further guidance.
Domestic pressure has also grown. Several lawmakers in the
House of Representatives and Senate have said that unless energy companies can
export oil to Asia and Europe, the drilling boom will eventually choke on its
own output.
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