The Standard (St. Catharines)

No hope for oilpatch activity growth

Grim outlook for Canada’s oil, gas sector: report

- DAN HEALING

CALGARY — The Canadian oil and gas sector is in a holding pattern in which spending and production growth can’t occur until new ways to get products to export markets are found, according to CIBC analyst Jon Morrison.

The steep discounts being paid for Canadian heavy and light oil production compared with U.S. benchmarks won’t end soon and that means there’s no money for producers to increase their drilling budgets, he said in a report released Tuesday.

The report bodes poorly for Canada’s energy-services sector as the industry enters the winter drilling season, its traditiona­lly busiest time of the year as frozen ground allows more access to backcountr­y sites.

“We believe this reality will start to percolate into 2019 capex budgets, with a number of producers likely to delay the issuance of formal guidance until January and then we believe many are likely to announce developmen­t programs that show little to no incrementa­l production growth,” said Morrison in the report.

The report came as OPEC Secretary-General Mohammad Barkindo on Tuesday urged oilexporti­ng countries to increase investment to meet future demand as spare oil capacity declines worldwide.

In a speech posted on OPEC’s website, he said the global oil sector will need to invest US$11 trillion by 2040 to meet the future needs of the world.

But while world oil prices have risen recently to four-year highs due to concerns, including possible U.S. sanctions on Iran, Canadian oil prices have gone in the opposite direction as new production floods pipelines and U.S. demand drops temporaril­y due to fall refinery maintenanc­e outages.

“Canada is facing an unpreceden­ted epic pipeline problem,” said Morrison.

“And while we have known that this issue has been on the horizon for years, the pressure in the system is building and it’s set to remain ugly for some time.”

According to Net Energy Group, the difference between Western Canada Select bitumen blend prices and New York benchmark West Texas Intermedia­te for November delivery, has averaged US$45.50 per barrel this month. The difference between Edmonton Sweet and WTI has been about US$27.

Last week, the WCS-WTI differenti­al widened to more than US$52 per barrel, at which point analyst Matt Murphy of Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. calculated bitumen producers were actually losing money because the light oil used to dilute their heavy sticky crude cost more than what the barrel was selling for.

Western Canada will remain short of pipeline capacity even if Enbridge Inc.’s Line 3 replacemen­t pipeline is completed by 2020, thus adding 370,000 barrels per day of capacity, CIBC notes.

The short-term situation will improve but not enough to allow growth in activity if crude-by-rail exports double as expected to a record 450,000 barrels per day by this year-end, the report says.

Unusually, wet weather in Alberta in September will contribute to soft third-quarter earnings reports from oilfield services companies, Morrison added.

He said Canadian drilling rig utilizatio­n in the quarter ended Sept. 30 was about 32 per cent, higher than the 28.5 per cent in the same quarter last year, while the number of operating days were about nine per cent higher.

 ?? LARRY MACDOUGAL
THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? In one expert’s view, the Canadian oil and gas sector is in a holding pattern in which spending and production growth can't occur until new ways to get products to export markets are found.
LARRY MACDOUGAL THE CANADIAN PRESS In one expert’s view, the Canadian oil and gas sector is in a holding pattern in which spending and production growth can't occur until new ways to get products to export markets are found.

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