Penticton Herald

Oilsands project revived

Possible oilpatch rebound: Cenovus expansion second to resume since downturn

-

CALGARY — Cenovus Energy said Thursday it is reviving an oilsands project it had shelved two years ago due to the downturn in crude prices, the latest sign of a possible rebound in the oilpatch.

The Calgary-based oil producer announced Thursday it will go ahead with an expansion of its Christina Lake developmen­t in northern Alberta, making it the second oilsands project in as many months to be given new life.

The company also said it plans to invest between $1.2 billion and $1.4 billion in its operations next year, up 24 per cent from this year, and increase oil production by about 14 per cent to approximat­ely 230,000 barrels per day.

“I am confident and I am optimistic about our prospects for the year ahead,” said CEO Brian Ferguson on a conference call.

The news came as the Conference Board of Canada released a report Thursday saying Alberta is expected to emerge from its recession next year, with real gross domestic product growth of about 2.2 per cent, thanks to anticipate­d rising oil prices and the rebuilding of fire-ravaged Fort McMurray.

A day earlier, Alberta Finance Minister Joe Ceci and a panel of economists meeting in Edmonton agreed the worst is over for the provincial economy.

Constructi­on of the Christina Lake expansion is to resume next spring, Cenovus Energy said, and first oil production is scheduled for the second half of 2019.

Cenovus (TSX:CVE) said it anticipate­s spending an additional $800 million to $900 million to complete the 50,000-barrel-per-day, steam-driven project, bringing the total capital cost to about $1.1 billion. That would be about $500 million less than the original budget.

Last month, Canadian Natural Resources (TSX:CNQ) also cited lower costs as it announced it would resume constructi­on of its Kirby North oilsands project, designed to produce about 40,000 barrels per day. The company said it had spent about $700 million on the project before it was halted in 2014. It expects to spend $650 million more on the developmen­t for a total of $1.35 billion, $100 million less than the original cost.

Cenovus also announced Thursday it would spend $160 million next year to drill 50 horizontal oil wells into its Palliser convention­al oil block in southern Alberta after halting exploratio­n there two years ago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada