Canada's oil sands survive, but can't thrive in a $50
oil world
Send a link to a friend
[October 18, 2017]
By Nia Williams
CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) - Canada's oil
sands producers are stuck in a rut.
The nation's oil firms are retrenching, with large producers planning
little or no further expansion and some smaller projects struggling even
to cover their operating costs.
As the era of large new projects comes to a close, many mid-sized
producers - those with fewer assets and producing less than 100,000
barrels of oil a day in the oil sands - have shelved expansion plans,
unable to earn back the high start-up costs with crude at around $50 per
barrel. Larger Canadian producers, meanwhile, focus on projects that in
the past were associated with smaller names.
The last three years have seen dozens of new projects mothballed and
expansions put on hold, meaning millions of barrels of crude from the
world's third-largest reserves may never be extracted.
Where industry groups in 2014 expected Canada's oil sands output to more
than double to nearly 5 million barrels per day (bpd) by 2030, that
forecast has been knocked down to 3.7 million bpd.
This follows a spell of consolidation that has seen foreign majors sell
off more than $23 billion in Canadian assets in a year and turn to U.S.
shale patches such as the Permian basin in Texas, which produce returns
more quickly and where proximity to refiners means the barrels fetch a
better price.
"We cannot compete with that huge sucking noise to the south that is
called the Permian. Investment dollars are spiraling away down there,"
Derek Evans, chief executive of small oil sands producer Pengrowth
Energy <PGF.TO> told Reuters in an interview.
Permian production rose 21 percent in 12 months through July compared to
a 9 percent increase in Alberta's oil sands, according to Canadian and
U.S. government data.
COSTLY STARTUP PHASE
Mid-sized producers are hurting the most, due to start-up costs that far
exceed those in other major producing areas. Oil sands producers have
slashed operating costs by a third since 2014, but building a new
thermal project - in which steam is pumped as deep as one kilometer
(1094 yards)underground to liquefy tar-like bitumen and bring it to the
surface - requires U.S. crude benchmark at around $60 a barrel to break
even, analysts estimate.
The North American benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude <CLc1> has
traded between $42 and $55 a barrel so far this year. The U.S. Energy
Information Administration forecasts it will average $49.69 a barrel in
2017 and $50.57 a barrel next year.
There are around half a dozen thermal projects in the costly start-up
phase, when engineers steadily increase steam pressure to bring a
reservoir's production up to full capacity.
[to top of second column] |
A Suncor refinery is seen in Sherwood Park, near Edmonton, Alberta,
Canada November 13, 2016. REUTERS/Chris Helgren/File Photo
One of those is Athabasca Oil Corp's <ATH.TO> Hangingstone project. It was
originally conceived as a 80,000 bpd project, but instead will bring output to
only 12,000 bpd from the current 9,000 bpd. The project can break even with U.S.
crude prices of at least $53 a barrel, meaning right now Athabasca keeps losing
money on Hangingstone production. Size is crucial in the oil sands; the more
bitumen a company can squeeze out of a plant, the lower fixed costs per barrel
will be.
"(Athabasca) was a company built when oil was $100 a barrel. In those days we
were going to find funding for joint ventures and build greenfield projects to a
massive size. The reality is the world changed," chief executive Rob Broen told
Reuters.
Quarterly filings show why smaller players are struggling. Transportation and
marketing costs at Hangingstone, along with the cost of natural gas used to
produce steam to extract oil, and other operating costs are much higher compared
with Cenovus Energy's <CVE.TO> Christina Lake project, one of the
highest-quality and biggest bitumen reservoirs in the oil sands.
Pengrowth's development plans are on hold as well, Evans said, because the
company needs U.S. crude to stay at $55 for a sustained period to justify
investment in its 14,000 bpd Lindbergh thermal project, at one point intended to
grow as large as 40,000 bpd.
THE BIG GO SMALL
Large producers have pulled back in response to lower global prices as well. For
example, Suncor Energy's <SU.TO> 194,000 bpd Fort Hills mine, due to start
producing oil by the end of this year, is the company's last megaproject.
Canadian Natural <CNQ.TO> restarted construction on its 40,000 bpd Kirby North
project last November, one of a handful of smaller projects to start producing
in 2019.
Other companies like MEG Energy <MEG.TO> are planning expansions at existing
sites in 20,000 bpd "modules" rather than starting large new projects from
scratch. But even such more modest investments are out of reach for smaller
companies like Athabasca and Pengrowth.
"It's very hard (for a small company) to drag itself out of the financing black
hole it would have to get in to build a project to start with," said Nick Lupick,
an analyst at AltaCorp Capital. "A large company can take that on their balance
sheet without having to leverage too highly."
(Reporting by Nia Williams; Editing by David Gaffen and Tomasz Janowski)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |