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Pipelines, energy and natural resources

  • Thread starter Thread starter QV
  • Start date Start date
I've owned Keyera for about the last 5-6yrs now, what a great investment its been.
Are they talking in the liquified state? Every thing I read has output in the cubic meters not in barrels> That would seem to be about one large tanker per day. Does Keyera own that level of delivery at the harbour or does this mean another loading facility will be built somewhere?
 
Are they talking in the liquified state? Every thing I read has output in the cubic meters not in barrels> That would seem to be about one large tanker per day. Does Keyera own that level of delivery at the harbour or does this mean another loading facility will be built somewhere?
I truly don't have a clue to be honest, but anytime we can export more products to others beyond our shores is a 'win' in my books.
 
Are they talking in the liquified state? Every thing I read has output in the cubic meters not in barrels> That would seem to be about one large tanker per day. Does Keyera own that level of delivery at the harbour or does this mean another loading facility will be built somewhere?
This would be liquified tank cars. Not sure if this would be delivery to Prince Rupert or Vancouver. But could also go via US ports if required. Or move east as it's rail networks which means a certain amount of adjustment as needed.

It's also a more targeted product flow than Natural Gas (propane and butane products were in the article) which means they're focused on some of the higher value products from Natural Gas wells.

And just to make it more confusing oil tends to be reported in barrels but gas products they use cubic feet (US), cubic meters (Canada), or thermal units (Europe. 1 barrel ~ 6,000 cubic feet or 170 m3 or ~ 6 gigajoules of energy/5.7 million British thermal units.
 
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