By Laila Kearney
NEW YORK, May 7 (Reuters) - Shell Midstream Partners
said on Thursday it is offering storage in its Mars
Sour crude cavern on the U.S. Gulf Coast, as offshore producers
are not cutting output like onshore shale drillers despite the
oil price downturn caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
Crude oil storage has quickly filled since measures to stem
the spread of the virus chopped about 30% off of global fuel
demand, sending prices crashing into negative territory last
month. As a result, traders have been willing to pay high
premiums to store barrels.
Because offshore production is not as easy to bring offline
as short-cycle oil output like shale, some of that crude is
going into storage. Overall U.S. Gulf Coast storage is 60% full,
according to U.S. Energy Department figures.
Officials with the Houston-based affiliate of Royal Dutch
Shell PLC did not specify how much storage will be
available.
"Wherever we have a barrel of storage, we're pulling that
because storage is a hot commodity right now," Kevin Nichols,
Shell Midstream's chief executive officer, said on the company's
first-quarter earnings call.
Pipeline volumes fell modestly in the first quarter.
First-quarter volumes were 537,000 barrels per day (bpd) on
the Mars pipeline system, only slightly less than 539,000 bpd
from the prior quarter, the company said. The system can handle
600,000 bpd.
The 163-mile (262-km) pipeline originates roughly 130 miles
offshore, transporting production from the Mississippi
Canyon-area to salt dome caverns in Clovelly, Louisiana.
Shell's Zydeco pipeline, which delivers crude to St. James
and Clovelly, Louisiana, from terminals in Houston and
Nederland, Texas, logged volumes of 669,000 bpd in the current
quarter compared with 698,000 bpd.
Shell is moving ahead with a Mars system expansion, which it
expects to come online by mid-year 2021.
Officials declined to provide specific rates for the
newly-added storage.
Prices of medium sour crude grades, such as Mars Sour, have
held up better than light sweet grades, company officials said.
That is because there is less supply for sour and heavier crudes
than light sweet grades. Refiners need heavier, sour grades for
blending for diesel or other products.
Offshore drilling is also benefiting from access to export
terminals and U.S. Gulf refiners, Shell said.
"The Gulf of Mexico has held up, comparatively speaking, to
onshore shale," Nichols said.
The company's first-quarter revenue fell to $121 million
from $126 million for the prior three months.
Its shares were down 7.6% in afternoon trading.
(Reporting by Laila Kearney
Editing by Marguerita Choy)