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Sources say that the Permian pipelines of Plains All American in Texas are facing quality problems.

Plains All American crude oil pipelines connecting the Permian basin to Corpus Christi's export hub, Texas, are experiencing quality problems due to high levels of mercaptans or naturally occurring sulfur compounds. This is according to sources who have been familiar with this matter, and an official notice.

Plains, which has pipelines along the Gulf Coast, will begin charging a fee of a half dollar per barrel that does not meet the mercaptan specification. This is according to an notice sent to shippers and two sources.

Sources requested anonymity in order to discuss confidential data. Plains didn't immediately respond to our request for comment.

One source said that the quality issues may force Gulf Coast refiners to look for alternatives, particularly those in South Texas' Corpus Christi area, in order to obtain Midland crude oil from the Permian, which is delivered via the affected Plains pipelines.

Plains is still trying identify the source of the contamination. It is therefore too early to say if this will have an impact on U.S. crude oil exports. According to the port website, Corpus Christi exports over 2 million barrels per day of crude oil.

Plains has interests in several long-haul oil pipelines, which move roughly 2.1 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude out of the Permian basin to Corpus Christi, and then to Cushing, Oklahoma, the storage hub. Shariq Khan and Nicole Jao reported; Emelia Sithole Matarise, Liz Hampton, and Franklin Paul edited.

(source: Reuters)