Edmonton Journal

Paramount Resources CEO backs calls for reduced production to support oil prices

With refineries and pipeline contracts, Suncor, Imperial and Husky oppose idea

- DAN HEALING

A rift in the Western Canadian oilpatch over how to best deal with a glut of oil blamed for wide discounts in local spot prices continues to widen despite the province’s vow this week to buy locomotive­s and rail cars to help drain the surplus.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley said in speeches in Ottawa and Toronto this week that the province has decided to buy as many as 80 locomotive­s and 7,000 rail tankers — expected to cost hundreds of millions of dollars — to move the province’s excess oil to markets, with the first shipments expected in late 2019.

But that will take too long and doesn’t help with Canada’s inability to build new pipelines, which is the root of the problem, said Jim Riddell, chairman and CEO of Paramount Resources Ltd., on Friday.

“It’s (a government) problem that they created and they have to fix it,” said the normally media-shy CEO in an interview.

“They need to, in the short term, curtail production for both gas and oil. They have to do it thoughtful­ly so that it influences producers to shut in the lowest value production and not shut in the highest value.”

The intermedia­te-sized company was looking at raising its drilling budget next year to increase production but has changed its outlook in the last six to eight weeks to instead favour spending “a small fraction” of its 2018 budget of $600 million because of poor prices, Riddell said.

The curtailmen­t plan first put forward by oilsands giant Cenovus Energy Inc. was supported this week by Jason Kenney, leader of Alberta’s opposition United Conservati­ve Party, who suggested all companies in Alberta be forced to temporaril­y halt 10 per cent of their production.

Western Canada had total production of about 4.3 million barrels per day of oil in September.

Curtailmen­t is opposed by Calgary-based companies such as Suncor Energy Inc., Imperial Oil Ltd. and Husky Energy Inc. whose refining assets and firm pipeline contracts allow them to avoid most local price discounts.

On Friday, Imperial and Husky said they remain opposed to involuntar­y production cuts but support the rail investment­s because they could help to improve market access.

“Any and all actions that can be taken to increase take-away capacity are ultimately in the best interest of our industry,” said Imperial spokeswoma­n Lisa Schmidt in an email.

The Alberta government has appointed a panel to find solutions to low oil prices and says it hasn’t ruled out using curtailmen­t or adjusting its royalty scheme, through which it gets a cut of any oil or gas produced from lands where it owns the mineral rights, if necessary.

The CEO of well completion firm Trican Well Service says he, too, is supporting production cuts even though they could translate into a short-term drop in activity this winter, the season when most drilling in Western Canada is done because the frozen ground allows access to remote sites.

“If the current situation stays where it’s at, I think the industry could be in for a pretty significan­t 2019 (spending) cut,” said Dale Dusterhoft on Friday, adding he doesn’t normally support government interventi­on in the market.

“Mostly, it’s what’s the alternativ­e? The alternativ­e is to let the market play out and that’s a year away, likely, or three-quarters of a year, and by then we could have significan­t job losses and significan­t royalty losses for the government.”

He said Trican expects to lay off about 140 people by year-end because of expectatio­ns of lower activity in Canada.

It has a workforce of around 2,200 in Canada and the United States.

They have to do it thoughtful­ly so that it influences producers to shut in the lowest value production and not shut in the highest value.

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