Heavy Canadian crude falls to record low
CALGARY (Bloomberg) -- Heavy Western Canadian Select crude fell to a record low as several oil producers shut in production and some demand the Alberta government intervene to mandate across-the-board cuts.
The oil-sands benchmark fell $2.29 to $13.46/bbl Thursday, the lowest in Bloomberg data extending back to 2008. The price broke a previous record set in early 2016, when West Texas Intermediate crude futures were trading under $30/bbl amid a world-wide supply glut.
The price collapse comes as pipeline bottlenecks in Western Canada constrain exports just as WTI experienced a record losing streak amid rising U.S. stockpiles and projections for reduced demand.
Producers including Canadian Natural Resources and Cenovus Energy have responded to the price drop by curtailing what could amount to as much as 140,000 bpd or more, according to company statements. Some operators have gone further, asking that Alberta’s government mandate production cuts across the province.
Western Canadian Select at Hardisty, Alberta, traded at $43/bbl discount to WTI Thursday, $2.50 wider than on Wednesday, data compiled by Bloomberg show.