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Bakken Crude Express Pipeline: Oneok Partners Propose North Dakota-Oklahoma Oil Project

Posted: 04/ 9/2012 6:44 pm

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A natural gas company on Monday announced a proposal to get into the crude oil business by building its own 1,300-mile oil pipeline from North Dakota to the nation's biggest storage terminal in central Oklahoma.

Tulsa, Okla.-based Oneok Partners LP said the proposed Bakken Crude Express Pipeline would cost between $1.5 billion and $1.8 billion and have the capacity to move 200,000 barrels of crude daily from the heart of North Dakota's rich oil patch to the hub in Cushing, Okla.

Oneok's plan brings to six the number of pipeline projects proposed to help ship crude out of the rich Bakken shale and Three Forks-Sanish oil reservoirs in the western North Dakota, said Justin Kringstad, director of the North Dakota Pipeline Authority.

Which projects becomes a reality will depend on which get commitments from suppliers. Oneok spokesman Brad Borror said his company is negotiating commitments that could put it on track to begin construction next year and complete a pipeline by 2015.

Kringstad called Oneok's proposal "very substantial" but said the market will determine if any of the proposed pipelines are built.

"Ultimately, it will be up to the industry to decide which of the various projects it wants to support," Kringstad said.

North Dakota is the nation's third-biggest oil producer and is expected to trail only Texas in crude output within the next year. The state's burgeoning oil production is outpacing the ability to efficiently move the product to market, causing drillers to take deep price cuts. Shippers increasingly are using trains to get crude out of North Dakota, with rail shipments accounting for about a quarter of the more than 546,000 barrels produced daily in the state, Kringstad said.

Kringstad said of the five other proposed pipeline projects, which have a collective shipping capacity of 700,000 barrels a day, only TransCanada Corp.'s $7 billion Keystone XL project has firm shipping commitments. It also is the only one that needs federal approval because it is the only one that would cross the U.S.-Canada border, Kringstad said.

The bulk of the Canada-to-Texas pipeline, which would carry Canadian tar sands oil and 100,000 barrels of crude daily from North Dakota and Montana, is on hold after President Barack Obama temporarily halted it in January. But Obama last month directed federal agencies to expedite the project's southern leg, from Oklahoma to the Gulf Coast, to help eliminate an inventory glut in Cushing partly due to increased production in North Dakota.

Oneok already is North Dakota's biggest gatherer of natural gas, with more than 3,500 miles of pipelines in the state. Oneok also has nearly $2 billion in projects planned to ship and process natural gas and natural gas liquids from western North Dakota to Midwest and Rocky Mountain markets, Borror said.

Eighty percent of the proposed oil pipeline's path would follow Oneok's existing or planned natural gas pipeline routes, Borror said.

"We are currently working with producers of natural gas and natural gas liquids so this would allow us to be a full-service provider," Borror said.

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BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A natural gas company on Monday announced a proposal to get into the crude oil business by building its own 1,300-mile oil pipeline from North Dakota to the nation's biggest st...
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A natural gas company on Monday announced a proposal to get into the crude oil business by building its own 1,300-mile oil pipeline from North Dakota to the nation's biggest st...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pines15
02:59 PM on 04/11/2012
Just do it yesterday.
07:55 AM on 04/11/2012
What a shame.More destruction and pollution of our country for gas.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pines15
03:02 PM on 04/11/2012
cheaper gas prices mean anything to you Deep Pockets.
07:45 AM on 04/11/2012
it would be good if they used the routes already in use, no surprises along the way, hopefully.
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
10:44 PM on 04/10/2012
We need this project. I hope people come to their senses and let it go through.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:02 AM on 04/11/2012
How can they stop it? It doesn't cross the border - no State Dept. approval required.

It'll happen.
08:33 AM on 04/11/2012
I believe when a pipeline crosses a state borders, it comes under Federal regulation.

Sorry, I don't have the specifics on this.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:32 PM on 04/10/2012
Wait - I thought pipelines were bad! Were is the screaming from the enviornmental movement!

No more pipelines - remember?

Hahaha, just kidding. You greenos are pretty silly with your "no pipeline" nonesense, as projects like this demonstrate.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pines15
03:03 PM on 04/11/2012
the green'o are P.C.ers in the extreme.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wanderland
Generic white guy
06:28 PM on 04/10/2012
Since this oil doesn't have to be strip-mined, it's not nearly as big a deal as Keystone.
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06:31 PM on 04/10/2012
The bulk of the tar sands oil isn't strip mined --- and very little of the proposed growth in the tar sands come from strip mining.

SAGD is the key tar sands technology, and that's all underground, just like the shale fracking in the Bakken.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wanderland
Generic white guy
10:41 PM on 04/11/2012
What's your source for the proportion mined vs. heat/steam/solvent extracted bitumen?
03:41 PM on 04/10/2012
You better believe it! The pipeline is needed. The market is screaming out for it. If it's not Keystone XL, it will be another instead. Actually, given the growth of both the Tar Sands and the Bakken production, there will be several pipelines built to get the oil from where it is produced to where it wil be refined.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
grappler1987
Heaven is a gift, not a reward
12:50 PM on 04/10/2012
Many in N. Dakota are raking in the cash. Kudos.