National Post

Offshore projects in N.L. get new life

Terra Nova, White Rose

- Geoffrey Morgan

CALGARY • Two of Canada’s largest oil companies, Suncor Energy Inc. and Cenovus Energy Inc., are swapping interests in stalled projects off the coast of Newfoundla­nd in a move that could restart work at both and boost much-needed job prospects in the province.

The Calgary-based oil majors announced agreements to restructur­e the Terra Nova and West White Rose projects off of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador after markets closed Wednesday. The agreements, supported by $205 million in funding from the provincial government, mean work will restart on the Terra Nova project this month and the companies will evaluate the feasibilit­y of restarting work on West White Rose by the middle of 2022.

The Terra Nova extension provides “strong economic returns and provide longterm value for investors,” Suncor president and CEO Mark Little said in a release announcing the company and its partners would move forward with maintenanc­e work on the project this month, under newly restructur­ed agreements. The project is expected to return to operations in 2022 and will now continue operating until 2033.

Suncor will increase its ownership stake in Terra Nova to 48 per cent from roughly 38 per cent; Cenovus will increase its stake to 34 per cent from 13 per cent; and El Dorado, Ark.-based Murphy Oil Corp. will boost its ownership to 18 per cent from 10 per cent. The concentrat­ed ownership structure will lead to four internatio­nal oil companies — Exxon Mobil Corp., Chevron Corp., Norway’s Equinor SA and Mosbacher Operating LLC — exiting the project.

“This agreement also provides certainty for the 1,000 plus local direct and indirect jobs that support the project,” Little said. “We appreciate the deep collaborat­ion and support from the provincial and federal government­s, which has been crucial to helping us reach this important milestone.”

Suncor is also boosting its ownership interest in the West White Rose project to 40 per cent from 27.5 per cent, in exchange for a cash payment from Cenovus, which is reducing its stake to 60 per cent from 72.5 per cent.

“Sanctionin­g the Terra Nova asset life extension provides a superior value propositio­n for our shareholde­rs compared with the alternativ­e of abandoning and decommissi­oning the project,” Cenovus president and CEO Alex Pourbaix said in a release.

“While we are still evaluating whether to proceed with West White Rose, the capital risk in our portfolio will be reduced if we decide to move forward.”

The two agreements, announced back-to-back after markets closed Wednesday, were cause for celebratio­n

in the Atlantic province’s struggling offshore oil industry and for a province which had been expected to face the slowest economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

“This will get the province back on track for more normal levels of economic activity,” said Pedro Antunes, chief economist at the Conference Board of Canada, noting that he had previously expected the province’s GDP to grow by 4.5 per cent in 2021 and 2.5 per cent in 2022. He said the restart of work at Terra Nova creates “upside risk” to those numbers.

“Oil production will show up in the GDP numbers big time,” Antunes said.

Local contractor­s servicing the equipment and ships that service the Terra

Nova and West White Rose facilities are also expected to benefit from work restarting.

“The Terra Nova (floating, production, storage and offloading facility) once looked perilously close to never returning to production and now we will see work begin immediatel­y here in the province,” Charlene Johnson, CEO of the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Oil and Gas Industries Associatio­n (NOIA), said in a release, adding the developmen­t “means significan­t work for NOIA members.”

Roughly 1,000 workers were laid off when work stopped on the Terra Nova project in late 2019, marking a major blow to a province of roughly half a million people, which experience­d a 5.3 per cent contractio­n in

its GDP in 2020 according to RBC Economics.

In early 2020, then-owner Husky Energy Inc. announced it would suspend work on the West White Rose project and directly asked for assistance in financing the project. Cenovus bought Husky for $9 billion last year, including debt, and had not publicly signalled whether it would restart work on West White Rose as it evaluated which of the acquired Husky assets it would keep or sell.

“I am far more optimistic about the future of the West White Rose project today than I was a few weeks ago,” NOIA’S Johnson said. “We look forward to continuing to work with them on these projects and the significan­t opportunit­ies they bring for

NOIA members in the supply and service sector.”

The two projects are important to Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s economy but represent a “relatively small part” of Suncor’s and Cenvous’ portfolios, Scotia Capital analyst Jason Bouvier wrote in a Thursday research note, adding that he did not expect the share price of either company to react to the news.

“We have a positive view of the decision to proceed with the Terra Nova life extension and re-evaluate the West White Rose project,” Bouvier wrote.

Cenovus shares fell 0.6 per cent to $10.58 on the Toronto Stock Exchange, while Suncor shares closed at $23.45, up 1.4 per cent.

 ??  ?? Suncor operates the Terra Nova field.
Suncor operates the Terra Nova field.
 ?? SUNCOR ?? Canadian oil majors Suncor and Cenovus are both increasing their stakes in the offshore Terra Nova field, above.
SUNCOR Canadian oil majors Suncor and Cenovus are both increasing their stakes in the offshore Terra Nova field, above.

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