Medicine Hat News

Canadian firms adapt to oil supply certainty

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CALGARY A shift in global oil markets sentiment is under way, replacing decades of scarcity fears with confidence in surpluses, capping oil prices and forcing changes in the way the industry works, observers say.

“We’re moving from a mindset where oil was considered a scarce resource to one now where it’s more of a plentiful resource,” said Steve Reynish, executive vice-president of strategy and corporate developmen­t at Suncor Energy Inc. (TSX:SU), speaking at a conference in Calgary last week.

“What we’re seeing is a huge reorganiza­tion worldwide and it’s all about how can we compete in a more plentiful world and that really takes us to competitiv­eness, cost-cutting, capital discipline.”

Reynish said Canada has fallen behind the U.S. in pipeline and major resource project constructi­on and needs to rework regulatory, political and environmen­tal priorities. As an example, he reiterated a call by Suncor CEO Steve Williams last year to update Alberta conservati­on rules to allow oilsands producers to leave the most costly and carboninte­nsive portions of a resource untapped.

The world’s current oil oversupply has been largely driven by U.S. shale oil and gas plays, Reynish said. According to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion, Canada’s largest energy customer has boosted domestic oil production from less than four million barrels per day in 2008 to 9.2 million bpd now, while gas output has risen from 67 million cubic feet per day to 89 million cf/d.

The production surplus that put oil prices in a funk starting in mid-2014 has pushed potential investors to the sidelines, experts say.

Energy analyst Nick Lupick of AltaCorp Capital said the recent stability in benchmark U.S. West Texas Intermedia­te prices has encouraged some investors to put oil and gas stocks back in their portfolios again but the market is “skittish” and could easily be derailed by volatility in oil prices. Most funds remain below market weighting in oil and gas securities, he said.

“Between US$50 and $53 WTI (per barrel) is perfect,” he said in an interview.

“If we can sit there for the rest of the year, fundamenta­ls are showing better, buying will likely continue, and the weightings will come up. What we don’t want to see is volatility.”

WTI was trading at above US $51 on Friday.

Oilsands production is expected to rise early next year as Suncor’s Fort Hills mine adds 194,000 bpd and Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. (TSX:CNQ) brings on its 80,000-bpd Horizon mine expansion.

Lupick said there’s plenty of demand in the world for that heavy oil but a lack of pipeline space means higher-priced railway cars will have to be employed to bring new barrels to market in the short term.

Adam Waterous, who left Scotiabank to start investment firm Waterous Energy Fund early this year, said he remains convinced that this is the perfect time to invest in oil and gas after four decades of “lousy” six to eight per cent returns from the sector.

He said the “age of scarcity” began with the Arab oil embargo on the U.S. in 1973 and has ever since prompted poorly-considered energy projects in Canada based on overly optimistic commodity price forecasts.

“Optimism is the enemy of the investor,” he said. “I’m a buyer right now. I love negative headlines.”

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