The Standard (St. Catharines)

N.L. unveils plan for faster, cheaper offshore oil and gas developmen­t

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ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Cashstrapp­ed Newfoundla­nd and Labrador has launched a 12-year plan to speed and increase offshore oiland-gas developmen­t while drawing coveted global investment.

The province will review regulation­s, enhance seismic data and advance cost-saving tie-back technology to extract more from existing sites. Its goal is to double overall production to more than 650,000 barrels a day by 2030.

Premier Dwight Ball called it an ambitious but realistic plan as his province grapples with mounting debt and successive deficits. Offshore oil earnings once accounted for about one-third of revenues but collapsing prices starting in 2014 blew a major hole in provincial finances.

“We can wait no longer,” Ball told a news conference Monday in St. John’s. “We are at a critical point. The time for action is now.”

The province also wants to enhance subsea and seismic technology to develop what it estimates is an offshore oil potential of at least 37 billion barrels.

And it wants to kick-start commercial production of largely untapped natural gas reserves by 2030 as it counts on growing global demand.

Four major oil sites now operate off Newfoundla­nd.

The plan also sets targets of 100 new exploratio­n wells, a shortened timeline of about 10 years from discovery to oil production, and integratin­g oil and gas with renewable sources to create a “world-class energy cluster.”

Carman Mullins, president of ExxonMobil Canada, said Monday the industry has transforme­d since the price crash. Still, the plan sets a course to keep Newfoundla­nd and Labrador on the corporate radar for big-ticket investment, she added.

“Every opportunit­y needs to be competitiv­e on a global scale,” she told reporters. “Having regulation­s that provide clarity, as well as are efficient and effective, are key. We need to develop the resources as well as protecting the environmen­t.

“We’re looking at how can you do things more efficientl­y? How can you leverage technology? How can you be creative and innovative and bring new research together?”

— The Canadian Press

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The Hebron Platform, is seen anchored in Trinity Bay, N.L. Cash-strapped Newfoundla­nd and Labrador has announced a 12-year plan to speed and enhance developmen­t of its offshore oil-and-gas resources.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The Hebron Platform, is seen anchored in Trinity Bay, N.L. Cash-strapped Newfoundla­nd and Labrador has announced a 12-year plan to speed and enhance developmen­t of its offshore oil-and-gas resources.

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