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As oilsands punished, tanker loads of cheap Saudi oil sail into Canadian ports daily

The Irving Oil Ltd. refinery in Saint John, New Brunswick.

As federal and provincial politicians pat themselves on the back for his or her climate change ‘leadership,’ and pipeline opponents gloat about stalling construction of recent Canadian pipelines, tanker-loads of foreign oil are delivered regularly to Eastern Canadian refineries, including increasing volumes from Saudi Arabia.

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That’s right. Saudia Arabia, the oil-rich kingdom that’s waging a brutal price war to shore up its market share and devastating Canada’s oil and gas sector in the process, dumped an average of 84,017 barrels each day of their cheap oil in New Brunswick’s Irving Oil Ltd. refinery in 2015, according to data compiled by the National Energy Board (NEB). That’s up from 63,046 b/d typically in 2012.

Overall, refiners in Quebec, Ontario, Newfoundland and New Brunswick imported about 650,000 barrels each day from foreign producers in 2015. Along with Saudi Arabia, the oil came from the United States, Algeria, Angola, Nigeria, because there is insufficient pipeline capacity to import it from Western Canada, which produces much more oil than it needs.

The reversal of Enbridge Inc.’s Line 9, that is finally ready to go after much opposition and moves up to 240,000 b/d of Western Canadian oil to Montreal, means oil imports will drop this season – but not likely from Saudi Arabia.

Wouldn’t it be nice if refineries in our own country took this oil instead of foreign oil?

The Irving refinery, Canada’s largest, says on its website it has a long-term supplier partnership with the Saudis. The organization is a big supporter of TransCanada Corp.’s proposed Energy East pipeline from Alberta to New Brunswick, but until it’s done, it features a 350,000 b/d refinery to help keep running a business.

“We source crude oil throughout the world for our refinery in Saint
John, N.B.,” said a spokesman for Irving. “Our crude imports come from oil producing regions for example Saudi Arabia, Norway, the united states, and Canada – including Newfoundland and Labrador, Alberta and Saskatchewan. Canadian crude is processed at our refinery, from a few of the same producers who would be shipping product via the Energy East pipeline.”

The Saudi imports alone are equal to the daily manufacture of a mid-sized producer such as Calgary-based Penn West Exploration Ltd., certainly one of scores of Canadian firms that are can not remain solvent after slashing jobs and budgets to outlive the Saudi-instigated oil price collapse.

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