Morgan’s Point Ethane Export Terminal, Houston Ship Channel
Morgan’s Point Ethane Export Terminal, Houston Ship ChannelEnterprise Products Partners

Enterprise Products says US set to deny export of three ethane cargoes to China

Short positions in ethane increase, affecting market prices.
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Enterprise Products Partners said on Wednesday it received notice that the US Commerce Department intends to deny its requests to export three proposed cargoes of ethane, totaling around 2.2 million barrels, to China.

The move could pressure US ethane exports, and force producers to seek alternate buyers and raise costs for Chinese petrochemical firms, which rely almost exclusively on US producers for ethane imports.

The Bureau of Industry and Security, an agency of the Department of Commerce, informed pipeline and terminal operator Enterprise in a letter two weeks ago that exports of ethane and butane pose an unacceptable risk of military end-use in China, according to a company filing.

Enterprise said last week that its ethane and butane exports could be hurt by a Department of Commerce requirement that it apply for a license to export to China.

The company is one of the top US handlers of ethane and butane through its port terminals. The US last week ordered a broad swath of companies to stop shipping goods, including ethane and butane, to China without a license and revoked licenses already granted to certain suppliers.

Exports of ethane to China account for about half of the total US exports of the shale gas. The US and China are locked in an ongoing trade war after US President Donald Trump imposed sweeping tariffs in early April.

Enterprise said it has up to 20 days to respond to the BIS's notice about the denied export cargoes with any comments or rebuttals. Unless the company is advised otherwise by the BIS by the 45th day after the original notification, the denials will become final.

Enterprise shares closed 2.1 per cent lower at $30.82 on Wednesday. The BIS did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

"Today's announcement calls into question whether the new ethane export license requirement is merely a short-term disruption," said Samantha Hartke, Vortexa’s head of Americas analysis.

"Near-term cargo reshuffles or resales could be necessary, as would a greater dependence on domestic storage," she said, adding that short positions in ethane were piling up on Wednesday with prompt-month trading down three cents per gallon on the day due to the Enterprise announcement.

Ethane and butane, liquids separated from natural gas, are used to make plastics and chemicals and also for heating and cooking.

Chinese petrochemical firms use ethane as a feedstock because it is a cheaper alternative than naphtha, while US oil and gas producers need China to buy their natural gas liquids as domestic supply exceeds demand.

(Reporting by Arathy Somasekhar and Georgina McCartney in Houston; Editing by Liz Hampton, Nia Williams and Matthew Lewis)

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