PLG CEO and Founder, Graham Brisben spoke at the North American Rail Shippers Annual Meeting in San Francisco, California on May 24, 2017. Mr. Brisben’s presentation North American Energy Insights: Special Focus - Mexico included:
Overview of the current energy market in North America
Information on the key impacts in the rail industry
Emerging opportunities for rail in Mexico
1. 1Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Experience / Expertise / Excellence
NORTH AMERICAN
ENERGY INSIGHTS
SPECIAL FOCUS: MEXICO
NARS 2017 ANNUAL
MEETING
R
Graham Brisben, CEO
PLG Consulting
May 24, 2017
San Francisco, CA
2. 2Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Partial Client List
Experience
About PLG
PLG Team
▪ Real-world, industry
veterans
▪ Delivering value to over
200 clients since 2001
▪ Over 30 logistics, supply
chain, market, and
engineering experts
Core Expertise
▪ Bulk commodity logistics
▪ Surface transportation
and logistics
▪ Energy and chemical
markets
▪ Logistics infrastructure
design
▪ Investment strategy and
corporate development
Services Include
▪ Market analysis &
strategy
▪ Investment thesis,
target identification, due
diligence, post-
transactional support
▪ Diagnostic
assessments and
optimization
▪ Supply chain design
and operational
improvement
▪ Independent logistics
technology assessment
and implementation
▪ Site selection
▪ Logistics infrastructure
design & engineering
3. 3Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Today’s Presentation Agenda
I. N.A. Energy Overview
II. Key Rail Industry Impacts
III. Special Focus: New Rail
Opportunities in Mexico
5. 5Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Crude Oil: $50/bbl Supporting a Return to Growth
Crude oil (WTI) currently trading at ~$50
▪ EIA forecasts crude oil to be at $53 end of 2017 and $57 end of
2018 (EIA Short Term Energy Outlook, May 9, 2017)
▪ Non-OPEC compliance with crude oil cuts was only 69% in April
(385 kpbd vs. target of 558 kbpd) while OPEC was mostly in
compliance; Next OPEC meeting is May 25
U.S. crude oil production at 9.3 million barrels
per day (EIA)
▪ Up from 8.5 million barrels per day in September 2016
▪ Canadian crude oil production is currently estimated at 3.7 million
barrels per day (NEB)
$0
$20
$40
$60
$80
$100
$120
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
1/3/2012 1/3/2013 1/3/2014 1/3/2015 1/3/2016 1/3/2017
U.S. Crude Production vs.. WTI
U.S. Crude Oil Production (kbpd) WTI ($/bbl)
$/bblkbpd
Source: EIA, May 2017
6. 6Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Shale Plays Driving US Production
Permian is clearly
the place to be due
to:
▪ Six layers of shale
▪ Thicker layers
▪ More productivity
potential
▪ Great infrastructure
Texas/Oklahoma/Ne
w Mexico now have
60% of horizontal
rigs
Producers continue
to focus on sweet
spots
0
100
200
300
400
500
U.S. Land, Horizontal Rig Count Permian
Eagle Ford
Cana Woodford
Marcellus
Williston
Haynesville
DJ-Niobrara
Utica
Others
Source: Baker Hughes, May 2017
Nov. 21, 2014 May 19, 2017
$0
$20
$40
$60
$80
$100
$120
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
U.S. Land, Horizontal Rig Count vs.. WTI ($/bbl)
Others
Cana
Woodford
Williston
Marcellus
Permian
DJ-Niobrara
Eagle Ford
WTI ($/bbl)
Source: Baker Hughes, EIA, May 2017
rigs ($/bbl)
7. 7Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Shale Development Continuing
Story - Productivity
Productivity increases have
continued beyond
expectations due to:
▪ Producers are still exclusively drilling
sweet spots (known high production
areas)
▪ Utilizing pad drilling and high
intensity fracking in growing scale
▪ Permian has steepest productivity
improvement curve as they
transitioned to horizontal drilling in
2014/2015 (see chart)
Producers will face some
headwinds to further improve
productivity
▪ Oil field services suppliers still are
operating at break even/negative
margins – price increases are being
demanded by OFS suppliers
▪ Increased penetration of high
efficiency techniques leave fewer
areas to improve
2017 expectations
▪ Permian likely to see continued steady growth as major producers
have bought considerable acreage for long term production
▪ Eagle Ford has lost most volume, most rapidly. Possible growth in the
“wet” portion (NGL rich) later in the year and 2018.
▪ Bakken will likely see further volume decrease due to decline curve
loss in existing wells and low rig count/drilling activity
▪ SCOOP/STACK and Niobrara seen as potential growth areas
Source: EIA, Drilling Productivity Report, May 2017
8. 8Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Natural gas remains oversupplied in U.S.
Natural gas demand will grow due to:
▪ Coal-fired generation plant retirements
▪ More industrial use – fertilizer, methanol feedstock
▪ Pipeline exports to Mexico and Canada; LNG export
overseas
E&P companies have driven phenomenal
efficiency gains in past five years
▪ 30+ year supply at ~$4 mm/btu; cost of production
continues to fall
US Shale Gas (Natural Gas)
Background and Future
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
U.S. Natural Gas Production (Bcf/day)
Historical Projection
Source: EIA, May 2017
$0
$2
$4
$6
$8
$10
$12
$14
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Natural Gas Price at Henry Hub ($/MMBTU)
Historical Futures
Source: EIA for historical, CME Group May 19, 2017 settlements for futuresSource: EIA, May 2017
10. 10Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Upstream to Downstream – Rail
Volume Trends
Feedstock (Ethane)
Byproduct
(Condensate)
Home Heating
(Propane)
Other Fuels
Other Fuels
Gasoline
Gas
NGLs
Crude
Proppants
OCTG
Chemicals
Water
Cement
Generation
Process Feedstocks
All Manufacturing
Steel
Fertilizer (Ammonia)
Methanol
Plastics
Petroleum Products
Petrochemicals
Inputs Wellhead
Direct
Output
Thermal Fuels Raw Materials
THE WAVE CONTINUES
U.S. petrochemical expansion based on
abundant, low cost energy and feedstocks is impacting other
manufacturing industries
MACRO IMPACTS TO-DATE INCLUDE
Dramatic reduction in crude imports, lower electricity costs, lower
gasoline prices, increased refined products exports
Downstream
Products
Chemicals
(Coal)
11. 11Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Correlation of Operating Rig Count With Crude
Carloads Originated Quarterly
CBR volume
has dropped by
63% since peak
CBR
destinations
have changed
dramatically
over time
▪ East Coast used
to dominate
volume
▪ Now East and
West Coast
volumes at parity
▪ Gulf Coast close
to zero
-
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
140,000
160,000
180,000
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
U.S. Class I Carloads Originated for Crude With U.S. Land Rigs
U.S. Land Rigs U.S. Quarterly Carloads Originated for Petroleum (STCC 131)
CarloadsOriginated
U.S.LandRigs
Source: Surface Transportation Board, Baker Hughes, March 2017
13. 13Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Western Canadian Crude by Rail – Growth
Window Expected for 2017 - 2019
Numerous production expansions expected
over next 24 months that will add ~500k bpd
including:
▪ Suncor Fort Hills
▪ Canadian Natural Horizon
▪ Imperial Kearl Phase III
Pipelines are currently at or near capacity
Next pipelines are slowly moving along
approval and then construction process
▪ TransMountain will add 450k bpd of capacity likely during 2019
▪ Enbridge Line 3 will add ~350k bpd of capacity also by 2019
▪ Keystone XL now a real possibility after 2020 – 400k bpd of
capacity
So, as new production comes online over next
two years, CBR is the only alternative to move
the crude
▪ PLG predicts that WC CBR volume will increase from the
current ~125k bpd level to over 300k bpd later in 2017 through
portions of 2019 until the pipeline expansions are complete
14. 14Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Correlation of Operating Rig Count With Crude and LPG
Carloads Originated Quarterly
0
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
140,000
160,000
180,000
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
U.S. Class I Carloads Originated for Crude and LPGs with U.S. Land Rigs
U.S. Horizontal, Land Rigs
U.S. Quarterly Carloads Originated for Petroleum (STCC 131)
U.S. Quarterly Carloads Originated for Liquified Petroleum Gases (STCC 2912)
CarloadsOriginated
U.S.LandRigs
Source: Surface Transportation Board, Baker Hughes, May 2017
LPG surpassed
crude by rail in
carloads in
2016
Continued
growth is
expected
▪ NGL production
expected to
grow 30% in
Marcellus/Utica,
ahead of
pipeline
expansions
▪ Western
Canada
shipments to
US
▪ New
opportunities in
Mexico
15. 0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
0
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
140,000
160,000
U.S. CLASS I QUARTERLY CARLOADS ORIGINATED FOR INDUSTRIAL SAND AND U.S. HORIZONTAL
LAND RIGS
U.S. Quarterly Carloads Originated for
Industrial Sand (STCC 14413)
U.S. Horizontal, Land Rigs
Source: STB (STCC 14413 – Industrial Sand: includes frac sand and other industrial sands), Baker Hughes, May 2017
Carloads
Originated
Rigs
Shale Gas Boom
Rig Shift From
Gas to Liquids
Shale Oil Boom
Oil Price
Collapse
High Intensity
Fracking
Six Phases of Frac Sand
Market To-Date
Frac Sand
Frenzy 3.0
Oil Price
Stabilizing
at $50+/-
bbl.
16. Longer
Laterals
MoreStages
Overpacking
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
4,000
2012 2013 2014 2015
Average Sand per Well
(Permian/ Bakken/ Eagle
Ford)
CloserWell
Spacing
>2xincrease
2016to2018
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
2014 2016 2017 2018
# Horizontal Wells
0
500
1,000
1,500
# Active
Horizontal Rigs
• Increase in frac sizes
per stage
• Increased interest in
utilizing finer mesh
sand (40/70 & 100
mesh) & CRC
Source: Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research (July 2016),
Bloomberg Intelligence
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
Permian Williston Eagle
Ford
Average Pounds Sand
Per Lateral Foot
2012 2016
Page | 16
Completion Trends Creating New
Proppant Demand Drivers
17. Materials
Chemicals
Clean Water
Proppants
OCTG (Pipe)
Railcars to
Transloading
5
From local
reservoir
Avg - 55
Largest -
240
5~8
Trucks to
Wellhead Site
20
9.5 million
gallons / job
**
Avg – 220
Largest - 960
20~32
Avg – 260
Up to 1,000
Truckloads
Oil/Gas/NGLs
Pipeline, Truck,
Rail
Waste Water
Avg – 65
Up to 250
Railcars
Page | 17
* Example is for rail-delivered supply chain ** Horizontal/Directional well average in last 6 months (Energent Group)
Each well drilled requires:
Shale Operations Influence Rail & Truck
Transportation Markets*
18. ▪ Projected proppant rebound to ~ 61 MM tons in 2017, followed by ~ 78 MM tons in 2018
▪ Oil price trajectory suggests proppant markets may be optimistic
Page | 18
$0
$10
$20
$30
$40
$50
$60
$70
$80
$90
$100
-
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017E 2018E 2019E 2020E
OilPrice(WTI,USD/barrel)
Proppant(MMtons)
Energent - actuals IHS Markit Tudor Pickering & Holt
Jeffries Goldman Sachs Wells Fargo
RBC Oil Price - EIA
Sources:
• IHS Markit, Energy Blog, May 3 2017
• Rich Shearer (President & CEO) Superior Silica Sand presentation at the Industrial Minerals 4th Frac Frac Sand Conference in Minneapolis Sept 13, 2016
• Wells Fargo, Oil Service Statistics and Valuation Handbook, January 6, 2017
• RBC Capital, Frac Sand Supply Demand Update, December 5, 2016
• Energy Information Administration, Short-Term Energy Outlook, as of January 10, 2017, and Annual Energy Outlook, Table: Petroleum and Other Liquids
Prices
Future Frac Sand Demand Forecasts
Predicated on Oil Price
19. 19Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Growing Demand for U.S. NGLs Will Outstrip
Supply In Coming Year
U.S. “liquids” shale plays currently
have an abundance of NGLs, especially
ethane and propane
▪ Production rose by 1 MMbd over past five years
driving widespread ethane rejection
▪ “Richest” NGL shale plays include Marcellus wet,
Utica, and Eagle Ford wet
▪ NGL oversupply has led to low price NGLs in U.S.
▪ Gas processing, fractionation, and pipeline
infrastructure mostly in place
▪ Gas processors will likely decrease ethane rejection
by ~300 Mb/d as demand grows over next five
years
Current ethane oversupply will be
reduced due to:
▪ Growing domestic petchem demand – 600 k/bpd to
be added in next three years
▪ Growing exports – 300 k/bpd from 2016 to 2018
▪ Potentially flat/slowing production if in low crude
price environment over next five years (NGL is
sympathetic to oil & gas volume)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
Production from Natural Gas Processing Plants (MMbpd)
Natural Gasoline
Butanes
Propane
Ethane
Source: EIA STEO, May 2017
20. 20Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Shale Gas Impacting Ethylene Feedstock Share
(Yield by weight) Ethane Propane Naphtha
Fuel Gas 13% 28% 26%
Ethylene 80% 45% 30%
Propylene 2% 15% 13%
Butadiene 1% 2% 5%
Mixed Butanes 2% 1% 8%
C5+ 2% 9% 8%
Benzene 0% 0% 5%
Toluene 0% 0% 4%
Fuel Oil 0% 0% 2%
Source: US Association of Energy and Economics,: Brooks, Robert ‘Modeling the North American Market for Natural Gas Liquids’ Published 31 May 2013
▪ Ethane as a feedstock drives tremendous ethylene yield, but
lower yields of other products (especially propylene)
▪ Shale NGLs produce between 42% to 65% ethane after
fractionation which has caused all new crackers in U.S. to
be 100% ethane-fed
▪ Europe, Latin America, and Asia crackers are predominately
fed by naphtha; Middle East mostly uses ethane
U.S. shale NGLs have significant ethane volume and when used as a feedstock yield higher ethylene
volume vs.. propane and naphtha feedstocks
Product yield from various ethylene cracker feedstocks:
Ethylene
Ethane Feedstock
Ethylene
Propane Feedstock
Ethylene
Naphtha Feedstock
22. 22Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Shale Gas Industrial Investment Forecast
As of 1Q 2017
The North American
petrochemical industry will
invest ~$126B in industrial
facilities as a result of shale
gas by 2025
50
projects
Product Category Breakdown
All Announced Industrial Projects in SHIELD
Total Announced Projects - $229B
➢ Commissioned since 2011 - $31.9B of investment
➢ Likely start up by the end of 2019 - $62.8B of
investment
➢ 2nd Wave – Likely start-up between 2020 and 2025 -
$32.2B of investment
➢ Not Likely - $101.9B of announced investment
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North American Polyethylene Expansion Plans (2016-
2026)
Great majority of the new polyethylene facilities are integrated with new world scale crackers
▪ North America has never experienced such a dramatic polyethylene capacity growth (36%) in a three year period and that
amount of capacity growth cannot all be used domestically
▪ Developing export markets will be a critical relief valve for the new North American capacity
Source:
Townsend
Solutions &
PLG’s SHIELD
Producers considering
“Third Wave” PE
plants include:
▪ TOTAL
▪ Formosa
▪ Williams
▪ Badlands
▪ Braskem
▪ Exxon/SABIC
These projects
represent an
additional ~5 MTPA of
potential polyethylene
capacity during the
2024-2026 timeframe
Extent of “Third Wave” polyethylene capacity growth for North
America will be determined by cracker build decisions, demand
growth, and global export competitiveness
20.3 MTPA
7.3 MTPA
2.9 MTPA
30.4 MTPA
36%
50%
0%
20%
40%
60%
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
2015 Capacity 2016 - 2019 2020 - 2023 2023 Projected
Increasefrom2015Capacity
MTPA
First Wave Second Wave
24. 24Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Projected Rail Volume Impacts from Shale Gas-Related
Industrial Expansion
Source: SHIELD by PLG, March 2017
New Rail Carload Growth From Likely Projects, by Product, Through 2025
AnnualCarloads
Investment by State with Product Volume
Although rail impacts
from shale gas-related
expansion will provide
less of a “rush” than
CBR, the growth will be
▪ Steady
▪ Sustainable for the long-term
▪ Spread across diverse
sectors of the economy
0
50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
300,000
Additional
Annual
Outbound Rail
Shipments
(Carloads) from
projects
commissioned
2021-2025
Additional
Annual
Outbound Rail
Shipments
(Carloads) from
projects
commissioned
2016-2020
Annual
Outbound Rail
Shipments
(Carloads) added
from projects
commissioned
2011-2015
25. 25Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Rail Industrial Volume Reality – Past and Future
0
500,000
1,000,000
1,500,000
2,000,000
2,500,000
% of Total U.S. Class I Carloads Originated for Coal and “Other”
Industrial-Related STCCs
STCC 1121 - Bituminious Coal
STCCs 10, 13, 14, 28-30, 32-36, 40
Description
2- Digit
STCC
Metallic Ores 10
Crude Petroleum,
Nat Gas & Gasoline
13
Nonmetallic
Minerals
14
Chemicals And
Allied Products
28
Petroleum And
Coal Products
29
Rubber And
Miscellaneous
Plastic
30
Stone, Clay, Glass,
Concrete Products
32
Primary Metal
Products
33
Fabricated Metal
Products
34
Machinery, Except
Electrical
35
Electrical
Machinery,
Equipment &
Supplies
36
Waste And Scrap
Materials
40
Included in “Other
Industrial Related”
STCCs
Shale Growth Oil Price Impact
Source: Surface Transportation Board, March 2017; excludes intermodal, autos, food, ag
~25% of all
carloads
~23% of all
carloads
~16% of all
carloads
~25% of all
carloads
Carloads
27. 27Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Mexico Energy Reform
75-year state monopoly over energy
has ended
▪ 2013 Constitutional amendment
▪ Affects all aspects: E&P, refining, distribution,
retail pricing
Reform objectives
▪ Move from state control to open market
▪ Tap foreign direct investment and expertise
▪ Meet growing consumer demand
▪ Strengthen the energy security of Mexico
Progress to-date
▪ Offshore E&P concessions
▪ Open season for third party use of PEMEX
pipelines and terminals
▪ Roll-back of price controls
▪ New entrants in retailing
28. 28Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Why Reform Was Necessary
PEMEX challenges
▪ Declining production – lowest output
since 1981 (currently 2.5MM bpd, down
from a high of 3.8MM bpd in 2004)
▪ Crude exports down 30% since 2004 to
1.2MM bpd
▪ Refinery under-utilization
▪ Mismatch of refinery capability and local
crude supplies
▪ Operating losses of $30B in 2015; debt
load of $80B
▪ Theft from pipelines and terminals
(~1.5MM gallons/day, nearly 7,000
illegal taps in 2016)
▪ Older refinery technology; billions of
dollars required for upgrading
▪ Increasing reliance on imports
▪ Declining production in the face of rising
demand
Source: Wilson Center using EIA & PEMEX data, October 2016
Source: Wilson Center using EIA data, October 2016
29. 29Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Mexico is Increasingly Dependent on
Energy Imports
Domestic production cannot keep pace with demand
▪ Petroleum demand expected to grow by 40% by 2029, mainly driven by transportation
▪ Record refined product imports in 2016 of close to 900k bpd; mostly gasoline
Source: Wilson Center using SENER data, October 2016 Source: Wilson Center using EIA & SENER data, October 2016
30. 30Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Meanwhile, US Becoming a Refined Products
Export Powerhouse
Nearly 3MM bbl/day exports by 2020
▪ Represents a net swing of nearly 6MM bbl/day from imports to exports
Combination of factors support US refined products competitiveness
▪ USGC has largest, most sophisticated and efficient refinery fleet in the world
▪ Supplied by nearby Cushing hub, GOM, and highly productive shale formations: Permian, Eagle Ford,
Haynesville, SCOOP/STACK
▪ Robust midstream infrastructure
▪ Robust rail and waterborne transport options from US refineries
Source: RBN and FGE, October 2016 Source: RBN and FGE, October 2016
31. 31Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
US Exports to Mexico Meeting the Growing
Demand for Energy
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
Jan-2015
Feb-2015
Mar-2015
Apr-2015
May-2015
Jun-2015
Jul-2015
Aug-2015
Sep-2015
Oct-2015
Nov-2015
Dec-2015
Jan-2016
Feb-2016
Mar-2016
Apr-2016
May-2016
Jun-2016
Jul-2016
Aug-2016
Sep-2016
Oct-2016
Nov-2016
Dec-2016
Jan-2017
Feb-2017
U.S. Exports to Mexico (kbpd) Other Petroleum Products
Kerosene-Type Jet Fuel
Petroleum Coke
Conventional Gasoline
Blending Components
Liquified Petroleum Gases
Distillate Fuel Oil
Conventional Motor
Gasoline
Source: EIA, May 2017
Conventional
Motor
Gasoline,
349
Distillate Fuel
Oil, 207
Liquified
Petroleum
Gases, 122
Conventional
Gasoline Blending
Components, 72
Petroleum Coke, 54
Kerosene-Type Jet Fuel,
35
Other
Petroleum
Products, 92
U.S. Exports to Mexico (kbpd) TTM
Source: EIA, May 2017
Mexico is a critical export market for US energy products
▪ 2016 US LPG exports to Mexico of 108k bpd represents 50% growth over
three years
▪ 60% of US gasoline exports and 25% of US diesel exports go to Mexico
US also the key supplier of natural gas
▪ Natural gas imports tripled to 3.6 Bcf/d from 2010-2016
▪ Electricity generation the key driver; switch from fuel oil
▪ Expected to exceed 6 Bcf/d by 2020
▪ Nearly 3,200 miles of new gas transmission lines being builtSource: RBN, December 2016
32. 32Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
The New Opportunity for Rail: Filling the
Gaps in Supply and Geography
Source: HIS and CRE, April 2017
▪ Existing
refined
product
pipelines at
or near
capacity
▪ Significant
use of truck
deliveries
▪ “Bakken in
reverse”
33. 33Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Build-Out of New Liquid Bulk Rail
Terminals Now Underway
Legend
FXE Railroad
New Liquid Bulk Rail Terminals
Major Liquids Ports
KCS deM Railroad
Short Line Railroad
Proposed refined products
pipelines
34. 34Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Mexico Represents New Potential for Diesel and
Gasoline Rail Shipments and Increased LPG Volumes
0
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
140,000
160,000
180,000
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
U.S. Class I Carloads Originated for Crude and LPGs with U.S. Land Rigs
U.S. Horizontal, Land Rigs
U.S. Quarterly Carloads Originated for Petroleum (STCC 131)
U.S. Quarterly Carloads Originated for Liquified Petroleum Gases (STCC 2912)
U.S. Quarterly Carloads Originated for Gasoline, Jet Fuel (STCC 29111)
U.S. Quarterly Carloads Originated for Distillate Fuel Oil (STCC 29113)
U.S. Quarterly Carloads Originated for Asphalt, Tar and Pitches (STCC 29117)
CarloadsOriginated
U.S.LandRigs
Source: Surface Transportation Board, Baker Hughes, May 2017
35. 35Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Refined Products by Rail (RPBR) to Mexico: Interim
Solution or Long Term Opportunity?
Big question #1: Can Mexican refineries
eventually modernize and expand enough to
diminish imports?
▪ Would require additional coking capacity and partnerships
▪ Would require US$ billions in upgrades
▪ Timing and partner interest is uncertain
▪ Local crude supply in doubt even if refineries upgraded
▪ Would still have to “compete” with the world’s most efficient
refineries on nearby USGC
Big question #2: Will refined product pipeline
infrastructure expand sufficiently from eastern
port(s)?
▪ Challenging topography
▪ Would require partnerships with capital and expertise
▪ Some projects under development
▪ Would still require expansion of distribution networks further
inland
36. 36Experience / Expertise / Excellence www.plgconsulting.com
Looking Forward To Your Questions!
Thank You!
For follow up questions and information, please contact:
Taylor Robinson
President
PLG Consulting
+1 (508) 982-1319 | trobinson@plgconsulting.com