The Telegram (St. John's)

Global positionin­g

Provincial government releases report on internatio­nal competitiv­eness in oil and gas investment

- BY KENN OLIVER kenn.oliver@thetelegra­m.com Twitter: kennoliver­79

Compared to some of the province’s peers and competitor­s in the offshore oil and gas world, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador remains an attractive jurisdicti­on for industry players, but it’s not without challenges.

This is according to the Newfoundla­nd & Labrador Competitiv­eness in Oil & Gas Investment jurisdicti­onal review completed by Wood Mackenzie and released Monday by the provincial government.

“Positionin­g Newfoundla­nd and Labrador globally as a preferred location for oil and gas developmen­t is a key commitment in The Way Forward, and this jurisdicti­onal review will help our government deliver on that commitment by providing a better understand­ing of our current global competitiv­eness,” Minister of Natural Resources Siobhan Coady stated in a news release.

The main purpose of the report is to identify where challenges exist against the key factors that affect offshore exploratio­n and developmen­t decisions.

The factors include geological prospectiv­ity and availabili­ty of data, geopolitic­al and abovegroun­d risks, cost and operating environmen­t, fiscal regime and regulatory structure, and breakeven price.

To do so, the factors were analyzed relative to a list of peer jurisdicti­ons that includes Australia, Brazil, Ireland, Mexico, Norway, Nova Scotia, the United Kingdom and the United States’ activity in the Gulf of Mexico.

“From the study, it was apparent that there are a great many areas where Newfoundla­nd and Labrador compares favourably with competing internatio­nal jurisdicti­ons, and this is borne out by the continued investment and commitment­s companies are making in the province,” Wood Mackenzie vice-president David Parkinson stated in a news release.

“However, as in any jurisdicti­on, a number of areas have been highlighte­d where Newfoundla­nd and Labrador can focus efforts to ensure it remains as competitiv­e as possible.”

The government says some of the challenges and the plans for tackling them were identified in Advance 2030: A Plan for Growth in the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Oil and Gas Industry, which was released earlier this year.

Paul Barnes, Atlantic director for the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, applauded the government’s efforts to understand how the province stacks up against other oil and gas jurisdicti­ons, but said the provincial government needs to work with Ottawa to address the barriers to investment that exist.

“We have seen a layering of added costs and regulatory impediment­s in recent years which is concerning, particular­ly in the current economic environmen­t,” Barnes said in an emailed statement.

He also cautions that the report does not take into account changes to the regulatory environmen­t on the way in the coming months and years, which include the Impact Assessment Act, carbon pricing/ policy and UNCLOS Article 82.

While prospectiv­ity is a

challenge in some other jurisdicti­ons, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, thanks in large part to two potentiall­y large pools in the Flemish Pass sub basin, is in a relatively good position among the peers group.

The Flemish pass accounts for only three per cent of the province’s offshore area.

“Recent substantia­l discoverie­s in the Flemish Pass have de-risked the area and demonstrat­ed the potential for sizeable discoverie­s,” the report reads.

“Looking forward, N.L. has identified several new sedimentar­y basins and recent seismic acquisitio­n and analysis has identified 650 leads and prospects which speaks to the potential for new discoverie­s.”

But the report quickly points out that even with attractive offshore acreage, the province is still competing with other jurisdicti­ons such as Brazil, Mexico, the U.S. in the Gulf of Mexico and Norway.

The report suggests that continued geological studies will improve prospectiv­ity and that $2.6 billion in exploratio­n work commitment­s for the Flemish Pass and West Orphan Basin, despite low oil prices, will keep the industry’s interest piqued.

When factors related to access such as ease of entry, contract sanctity, state presence, regulation, corruption and geopolitic­s are weighed, the province scores well in comparison to its peers.

“The only area where it does not score a zero (the most attractive score) is state presence and this relates to the equity participat­ion of Nalcor Energy in certain projects,” it reads. “At the same time, the effect on overall returns of Nalcor’s presence is much less than the effect of national oil company involvemen­t in many other jurisdicti­ons.”

The province, along with Nova Scotia, ranks well on abovegroun­d developmen­t risk, but strong ocean currents, icebergs, freezing conditions and other natural phenomena are a cause for concern with implicatio­ns on cost, physical environmen­t, supply chain, already relatively low level of oil and gas activity, and local content.

“On this last point, N.L. needs to ensure that any local content provisions do not reduce the overall attractive­ness and competitiv­eness of the jurisdicti­on vis-à-vis competing areas.”

The report also suggests the province struggles with commercial­ization compared to the peer group, and it’s attributed to the lack of gas infrastruc­ture and currency risk.

“For gas resources, N.L.’S current use of natural gas for enhanced oil recovery, distance to market and lack of pipeline infrastruc­ture impedes its ability to commercial­ize its discovered gas resources. Future opportunit­ies for developmen­t will be dependent on markets, resource availabili­ty and project costs,” the report stated.

“With respect to currency risk, the Canadian dollar remains exposed to fluctuatio­ns on account of the performanc­e of the oil and gas sector.”

While acknowledg­ing the challenge of assessing the competitiv­eness of the province’s cost environmen­t relative to other jurisdicti­ons, Newfoundla­nd remains among the highest-cost areas.

The capital required to get a project going and its continued operation is almost $14 higher per barrel of oil than the average for deep-water projects in other jurisdicti­ons as a result of the high cost of drilling, followed by the cost of production facilities.

The report states that the rig intake process contribute­s to the cost because only a small number of drill rigs in the global fleet meet the criteria for operating in the province’s offshore.

Among the peer jurisdicti­ons, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador lands somewhere in the middle as a result of being fiscally attractive — thanks to a competitiv­e government take percentage — but still fiscally unstable, due largely to varying fiscal terms from one project to the next.

An area where the report says the province could make improvemen­ts is in its regulatory regime, specifical­ly research and developmen­t, local content and developmen­t permitting.

“Developmen­t permitting in N.L. scores less attractive­ly than it could, due to the number of potential steps and consultati­ons required in order to have a developmen­t plan approved,” it reads.

“This includes the benefit plan which typically has to provide secondary benefits to the jurisdicti­on’s economy. In some areas such as Brazil this has been detrimenta­l to industry’s developmen­t as regulatory agencies have slowed the pace of activities which has been exacerbate­d by onerous local content stipulatio­ns.”

Parkinson stated the province needs to ensure regulatory requiremen­ts throughout the life of a project don’t add to costs or create delays.

“Newfoundla­nd and Labrador needs to work alongside companies to not only promote the potential within the province, but also share a joint view on the strategy for the oil and gas industry in the province.”

 ??  ?? The West Hercules offshore drilling rig. A new report examines the competitiv­eness of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s offshore oil industry in comparison with other jurisdicti­on.
The West Hercules offshore drilling rig. A new report examines the competitiv­eness of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s offshore oil industry in comparison with other jurisdicti­on.

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