The Telegram (St. John's)

Drilling forecast cut by 500 wells

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CALGARY — The Petroleum Services Associatio­n of Canada (PSAC) is slashing its 2018 drilling forecast to 7,400 oil and gas wells, down from 7,900 it predicted in its last forecast in October, but still ahead of the 7,094 actually drilled in 2017.

The group representi­ng companies that provide services to oil and gas producers says the lower expectatio­n comes as some of its members are cutting staff to deal with the shortage of work.

PSAC CEO Tom Whalen says higher prices paid recently for New York-traded West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) oil are welcome, but lower prices for western Canadian oil due to insufficie­nt pipeline takeaway capacity means Canadian producers don’t have as much money as their American rivals to spend on exploratio­n and developmen­t wells.

He says a preference by customers to drill oil wells instead of gas wells due to worse prospects for gas pricing has resulted in its B.C. drilling forecast falling by 110 wells, a reduction of about $850 million in capital spending by the industry in that province.

He says Saskatchew­an, which is more prone to producing oil, is expected to see over 300 more wells drilled this year than in 2017 at a cost of about $400 million. PSAC’S updated forecast assumes an average Alberta natural gas price of C$1.75 per thousand cubic feet and a WTI crude oil price of US$61.45 per barrel this year. “It’s shameful that we continue to sell our oil to the U.S. at a steep discount to WTI, short-changing Canadians over $15 billion per year,” Whalen stated in a news release.

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