National Post (National Edition)

Alberta oil companies look to secondary market to cash in

- Robert tut tle and Kevin orland

Alberta oil producers have found a way around production limits imposed on them by the provincial government: buy the right to pump barrels from other companies that don’t need them.

The volumes aren’t huge — Husky Energy Inc. is buying rights to produce an additional amount of less than 1,000 barrels a day, Rob Symonds, chief operating officer, said Tuesday in an investor call. It’s not a transparen­t market, mostly operating “by people phoning people,” Robert Peabody, chief executive officer, said in the call.

“It is a company-to-company market,” Symonds said. “It’s personal contracts.”

A l b e r t a ’s government imposed limits on producers starting to alleviate an oil glut caused by a lack of pipelines that sent heavy Canadian crude plunging in October to US$50 a barrel below benchmark West Texas Intermedia­te futures. The province announced last month it would ease the curtailmen­ts as prices strengthen­ed to an extent that shipping crude by rail became less economic.

Pengrowth Energy Corp., an oilsands producer, has been “actively engaged in this secondary market,” Tom Mcmillan, spokesman, said in an email.

A buyer of rights to produce will generally pay less than the value of the barrel to ensure a return, Mcmillan said. “The price you pay per barrel would need to strike a balance so that each barrel you produced creates incrementa­l earnings.”

Rules on the curtailmen­t allow companies to sell production rights so long as the transactio­n is reported to the government. Alberta’s government allowed such trades to ensure flexibilit­y and also ensure that the province’s output doesn’t fall below the limits imposed, Kevin Birn, IHS Markit’s director of North American crude oil markets, said in a phone interview.

The market is set to grow as spring approaches and companies shut equipment for maintenanc­e, Birn said. “The province is very clear that they would allow trading.”

Alberta’s curtailmen­t plan wasn’t an ideal solution but it was applied “fairly and equitably,” Mike Mckinnon, a government spokesman, said in an email. “We know that our plan is working to lower the oil price differenti­al and save jobs across the energy sector.”

 ?? LARRY MACDOUGAL / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Alberta oil producers are buying pumping rights from other firms to get around production limits.
LARRY MACDOUGAL / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Alberta oil producers are buying pumping rights from other firms to get around production limits.

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