NuStar using new pipelines to move fuel into Northern Mexico
NuStar Energy recently completed three key pipeline projects it says will expand the partnership’s capacity to move Permian crude oil to Corpus Christi for export, and to move refined products into Northern Mexico.
On the heels of completing a project connecting its existing 16-inch pipeline in South Texas to the Plains Cactus II pipeline that transports WTI volumes from the Permian Basin to South Texas, NuStar recently completed the second stage of its WTI export project, a new 8-mile, 30-inch pipeline to transport crude oil from a connection to the Plains Cactus II long-haul pipeline in Taft TX to NuStar’s Corpus Christi terminal.
NuStar also is building 600,000 barrels of additional storage at the Corpus Christi terminal, which will bring its total capacity to 3.9 million barrels. The company expects to complete this storage expansion in December.
“We are very excited about the continued growth of our South Texas Crude System, which is once again experiencing throughput at near the historically high levels we saw in the Eagle Ford’s heyday in 2015, and the increased utilization of our Corpus Christi export terminal, which is now handling the leading edge of the impending wave of Permian long-haul crude oil,” said Brad Barron, NuStar president and CEO.
“And we expect continued growth for both Permian and Eagle Ford barrels going forward.”
NuStar also recently began moving product through its newly expanded Valley Pipeline System in South Texas after increasing the system’s capacity to supply refined products from Corpus Christi to the Rio Grande Valley and Northern Mexico, the company said.
The expansion doubled the pipeline’s capacity from 45,000 barrels per day (BPD) to approximately 90,000 BPD, NuStar said. The expansion included adding a 75-mile loop of 12-inch pipeline between Seeligson TX and Edinburg TX, and making improvements at pump stations along the system, which includes delivery points in Brownsville TX, Edinburg and Harlingen TX.
In addition, NuStar says it began moving diesel into Northern Mexico following the reactivation of the partnership’s existing 11-mile, 8-inch refined products pipeline connecting its Laredo Terminal in South Texas and its Nuevo Laredo Terminal in Mexico. The reactivation included the installation of a new border crossing by horizontal drill under the Rio Grande River.
NuStar is currently building additional tankage and truck loading bays at the Nuevo Laredo Terminal, all of which are expected to be completed in February 2020, according to NuStar. The expansion efforts are related to a previously announced contract agreement between NuStar and Valero to move refined products from Valero’s Corpus Christi and Three Rivers TX refineries.
“We are pleased that we were able to utilize and expand existing assets to help address the supply imbalance in Northern Mexico that is expected to continue growing and exceeding that country’s infrastructure,” Barron said. “In addition to the agreement with Valero on the Nuevo Laredo project, there was an outstanding response from customers on the Valley Pipeline expansion with our recent open season being fully subscribed and resulting in seven-year contract terms.
“It’s an amazing coincidence that all three of these projects, each of which has been years in the making, all began moving volumes within 24 hours of each other. Each project is backed by long-term commitments with strong customers, and completing these projects on time and on budget is a testament to the outstanding work of our employees and contractors. And we look forward to even more growth opportunities in the future.”