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CANADA-CRUDE-Discount on Western Canada Select heavy crude widens

On Thursday, the discount between West Texas Intermediate (WTI), a North American benchmark futures contract, and Western Canada Select (WCS), a Canadian commodity, widened.

WCS for Hardisty, Alberta delivery in June settled at $9.25 per barrel below the U.S. benchmark WTI according to brokerage CalRock. It had settled at $9.15 per barrel below the U.S. standard on Wednesday.

Canadian heavy crude is trading at a discount, in part because the Trans Mountain expansion pipeline was opened a year ago. This increased the country's capacity to export oil. According to RBC Capital Markets, the average differential between WCS and WTI has narrowed by $23, or $4 over the last year.

Canadian crude also benefits from U.S. Sanctions on Venezuela and other nations, which boosts demand for heavy crude producers who are not sanctioned.

* Oil prices fell on Thursday as investors awaited a U.S. Iran nuclear deal, which could ease sanctions and release more barrels onto the world market. (Reporting from Amanda Stephenson, Calgary; Editing done by Mohammed Safi Shamsi).

(source: Reuters)