Ottawa Citizen

Fallout from pandemic threatens a decade of energy security gains

Devastatio­n could encourage dependency on ‘foreign oil,’ Peter Tertzakian writes.

- Peter Tertzakian is executive director of the ARC Energy Research Institute in Calgary.

On Monday U.S. President Trump tweeted that “OIL (ENERGY) IS BACK !!!! ”

He’s right: Oil is no longer being given away for free. Benchmark prices have clawed their way above US$30-a-barrel for the first time since early April. But few would be convinced that THE NORTH AMERICAN OIL INDUSTRY IS BACK !!!!

The devastatin­g effects of the pandemic — forced production shut-ins — could put Canada and the United States on a regressive path toward dependency on “foreign oil,” a historical­ly disparagin­g term.

Let’s flip the calendar back to 2008 or so. The United States had sent about 150,000 troops to Iraq, where the post-Saddam-Hussein war was still raging. America was “addicted to oil” as president George W. Bush had proclaimed. At the high point of U.S. dependency, in 2008, about two-thirds of that addiction was fed by imported oil. Excessive dependency on foreign oil was also costly.

A dozen years ago, oil prices averaged US$100 per barrel. Daily imports of 12.9 million barrels of crude oil and petroleum products were costing the country close to US$500 billion a year, a transfer of wealth that foreign petro–states were happy to ring into their treasuries.

Then came one of the fastest and largest energy transition­s in history: The North American shift to shale gas, tight oils and oilsands. The combined U.S.-Canadian supply growth of 10 million barrels per day, all in the span of a decade, pushed foreign oil out of the continent faster than a virus in a night club. Well not that fast; but in the 160-year time scale of the oil industry, the transition from imports to near–self-reliance was incredibly quick.

The details are not as important as what was accomplish­ed. By 2020, the United States reduced its imports to only 40 per cent of consumptio­n. From a combined Team USA-Canada perspectiv­e, our continenta­l reliance fell to a mere 20 per cent. In other words, Canada and the United States were close to being energy (oil) independen­t in the lead-up to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Being mostly self-secure in oil supply shields us from the possibilit­y of foreign disruption, but the economy and environmen­t benefit, too. Keeping several hundred billion dollars of commerce within our boundaries helps trade deficits and creates tens of thousands of high-paying domestic jobs. Having oversight of environmen­tal regulation­s is also vital to keeping tabs on climate change targets.

Now, the post-pandemic fallout could reverse a decade of energy security gains. Estimates vary, but more than three million bpd combined U.S. and Canadian oil output may be shut-in due to the COVID-19-induced demand destructio­n. Cars are hitting the road again and petroleum consumptio­n is rising; however, not all North American production is likely to come back, even when oil sees US$50-plus again.

Permanent impairment of some domestic oil supply is guaranteed. The only question — potentiall­y a multi-trillion-dollar question — is how much? It’s too early to know, but a financial lens is needed to see the real root of the problem.

Pushing foreign oil out of

North America over the past 10 years has been costly. Oil companies, backed by investors and banks, spent US$2.2 trillion to achieve near oil-independen­ce. Cash flow, equity investment and debt paid for all of it.

Post-pandemic all three sources of capital will be scarce. Cash flow by itself won’t be enough. Thirty-dollar oil may keep the lights on but doesn’t provide enough money to sustain flat production. Even fifty bucks makes it tough. Investment from Wall Street and Bay Street? That was largely cut off starting in 2018. And now access to debt will be scarce too — which bank will want to risk lending money to the industry after this catastroph­ic event?

In the absence of capital, shale oil production is likely to decline further over the next 18 months. Contrary to popular belief, oilsands won’t decline much because its extraction process requires little capital to sustain output. Regardless, give it about a year and the demon of “foreign oil” packed with its geopolitic­al baggage will be knocking on the doors of North American import terminals — again.

There is a question to ponder here: Whose responsibi­lity is national energy security? Does it lie with our free-market oil companies? Investors? Banks and lenders?

It seems western society and their government­s have relinquish­ed that responsibi­lity over the past 10 years, wanting nothing to do with oil. But it’s an important chin–scratcher, because North America is unlikely to shed its oil addiction anytime soon.

Regaining lost market share and flushing out our independen­ce was exactly what the Saudis and Russians wanted when they started a price war 10 weeks ago. At the time neither imagined the severity of the coronaviru­s. Now, as the pandemic eases, the losses to North American oil production are becoming evident. The opportunit­y set for “foreign oil” is potentiall­y even greater than they could have ever imagined.

 ?? MARK FELIX/AFP /AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? The losses to North American oil production are becoming evident as the pandemic eases, opening the doors wider than ever imagined for “foreign oil,” says Peter Tertzakian.
MARK FELIX/AFP /AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES The losses to North American oil production are becoming evident as the pandemic eases, opening the doors wider than ever imagined for “foreign oil,” says Peter Tertzakian.

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