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Trans Mountain Pipeline reaches agreement with oil shippers over toll dispute

Trans Mountain announced on Tuesday that it had reached an agreement with oil shippers following 18 months of negotiations.

Trans Mountain, owned by the Canadian Government, has said that the deal represents "a substantial majority" of the contracted shipping volume and was submitted to Canada Energy Regulator.

Trans Mountain has said that as part of the deal it negotiated, it would seek permission from the regulator for an increase in the percentage of its total capacity contracted, from 80% to 90%. That means the proportion of ?the 890,000-barrels-per-day pipeline that is currently reserved for spot shipments ?will drop to ?10% from 20%, if approved.

Trans Mountain is Canada's sole east-west oil pipe, providing direct access to China as well as other Asian markets. This is at a time when Canada is looking to diversify its oil exports and move away from the United States.

The Canadian government completed a major expansion of the pipeline in 2024. However,?oil firms have protested against the increased?tolls that Trans?Mountain charges to cover the cost overruns on the C$34 billion project.

Trans Mountain - which has proposed to add up to '300,000 BPD of capacity by 2028 through various optimizations projects - announced on Tuesday that it will launch an open'season' on July 13, allowing shippers to bid for 90,000 BPD of this new capacity, expected to be available before the end of the year. (Reporting and Editing by Bill Berkrot.)

(source: Reuters)