Oil On the Tracks: How Rail Is Quietly Picking Up the Pipelines' Slack

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Weโ€™ve talked a lot here on DeSmogBlog about oil (and tar sands crude) pipelines. You know, like the Keystone XL, which TransCanada is currently ramming through Texas, using whatever means necessary (including violence), and Enbridge’s Northern Gateway, which was just declared โ€œdeadโ€ by one of Canada’s top newspapers.

And weโ€™ve talked quite a bit about coal trains. All for very good reason. But we havenโ€™t ever delved into the growing trend of shipping oil by train. Trains are a crucial โ€“ and growing โ€“ part of oil industry infrastructure, so itโ€™s worthwhile to take a step back and get some perspective on this remarkable system. Understanding oil trains will help you understand, for instance, why oil markets are paying little attention to the pipeline debates.

Letโ€™s start with the rawย numbers.

Every week, over 17,000 carloads of oil are shipped in the U.S. and Canada. With roughly 600 to 700 barrels of oil in each carload, thatโ€™s between 1.4 and 1.6 million barrels of oil on the U.S. and Canadian rails every day. And these numbers are growing fast. This chart says itย all.

(I should clarify and say that these numbers represent the total amount of oil and natural gas liquids (NGLs), but as much digging as I did in the Energy Information Agency stats and Association of American Railroad reports, I couldnโ€™t find any good data to break it down anyย further.)

Whatโ€™s responsible for the recent surge in oil and NGL on the rails? Mostly the rapid development of the Bakken shale plays under the Obama administration. The expansion of Alberta tar sands extraction is also definitely playing aย role.

Pipelines are far cheaper and more efficient for shipping oil, so companies would rather send crude through pipes than load it onto trains. But in areas where pipeline access is limited โ€“ like the North Dakota Bakken shale โ€“ trains become the next bestย alternative.

Compare these maps of oil pipelines (from our earlier Pipelines 101 post) and Class I railroad lines:ย ย 

Obviously, the extension rail system can get tanker cars full of oil into and away from a lot more regions. Not that every region really matters. What matters most is connecting the wellheads (or sources) to theย refineries.

So looking at that pipeline map, you might wonder why the rail is necessary for the Bakken boom. Isn’t it well served by the Enbridge and Kinder Morgan lines? The answer is: yes and no. Yes, it’s served by those pipelines. But not well enough for the industry.

To put it bluntly: those pipelines out of the Bakken are maxed out. They’ve been operating at capacity for the better part of five years. So much so, that the production of the entire region was limited by pipeline capacity until mid-2010 when rail shipping kicked in. Since then, rail shipments have been steadily climbing, as companies have scrambled to build new higher capacity terminals in order to move moreย crude.ย 

Whatever your personal feelings about oil, there is also one big technical problem with the flurry of oil train traffic on North Dakota’s rails: as the industry trade newsletter from RBN Energy puts it, โ€œthe rail lines in North Dakota were not built for this kind ofย traffic.โ€ย 

In rail parlance, there are main lines and branch lines.ย  The main lines are the superhighways designed for heavy traffic. The branch lines are the back roads.ย  Most of the branch lines in North Dakota were built to support agriculture โ€“ to carry fertilizer at the beginning of the growing season and the grain harvest at the end.ย  It is these branch lines that are now being used to transport crude cars.ย  The traffic is heavy and continuous, resulting in much more wear and tear on the lines.ย ย 

You don’t often hear about an oil train spill, but derailments do happen, and even the 99.997 percent hazmat safe delivery rate boasted by the Association of American Railroads probably isn’t that reassuring to anyone living near the routes. (That figure is also from 2009, before the boom in crude railcars on tracks that weren’t engineered for such use.)ย 
ย 
So whereโ€™s it all going? Today, the vast majority of oil train movement is from the Bakken shale region and Canada to coastal U.S. refineries, particularly on the Gulf Coast. Increasingly, these coastal refinery hubs are building new rail terminals to increase capacity.

Two such major projects were announced this year. The first, in St. James, Louisiana, will serve the entire Louisiana Gulf Coast refinery district. Another, perhaps more surprising, is in Albany, NY, where Global Partners, LLC more than tripled their capacity to offload Bakken crude from trains, with the intention of putting it on barges and shipping it down the Hudson River to East Coast refineries.

ย 
That’s right. While all the talk is about pipelines, oil trains are quietly chugging into more and more stretches of the country. Wherever there’s a refinery and a nearby set of tracks, you can be sure that oil and gas companies are working to link them to the booming shale wells.ย 
ย 
This should also serve as a reminder that, above all else, demand is what drives the oil boom. Although the current battles over pipelines like the Keystone XL and Enbridge’s Line 9 and the Northern Gateway are certainly important and critical, as long as there is strong demand, oil is always going to keep finding a way to refineries, and the plundering of the shale plays and tar sands will continue to expand dangerously. That’s bad news for the global climate, for air quality and drinking water supplies, and for future generations who will suffer from the lack of foresight in our energy planning.ย 
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Ben Jervey is a Senior Fellow for DeSmog and directs the KochvsClean.com project. He is a freelance writer, editor, and researcher, specializing in climate change and energy systems and policy. Ben is also a Research Fellow at the Institute for Energy and the Environment at Vermont Law School. He was the original Environment Editor for GOOD Magazine, and wrote a longstanding weekly column titled โ€œThe New Ideal: Building the clean energy economy of the 21st Century and avoiding the worst fates of climate change.โ€ He has also contributed regularly to National Geographic News, Grist, and OnEarth Magazine. He has published three booksโ€”on eco-friendly living in New York City, an Energy 101 primer, and, most recently, โ€œThe Electric Battery: Charging Forward to a Low Carbon Future.โ€ He graduated with a BA in Environmental Studies from Middlebury College, and earned a Masterโ€™s in Energy Regulation and Law at Vermont Law School. A bicycle enthusiast, Ben has ridden across the United States and through much ofย Europe.

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