Times Colonist

Oilpatch sinks deep into red, but upturn predicted for 2016

- LAUREN KRUGEL

CALGARY — Canada’s oil industry is expected to dive into the red this year, but begin crawling back to profitabil­ity in 2016 as cost-cutting efforts pay off, according to a Conference Board report published amid a flurry of discouragi­ng news in the oilpatch.

The Ottawa-based economic thinktank is predicting the oil extraction industry will post a $2.1-billion pre-tax loss in 2015, compared with profits of $6 billion last year.

Revenues are expected to fall by 22 per cent this year, but rebound at an annual average rate of 14 per cent growth between 2016 and 2019.

“While Canadian oil companies have acted swiftly, delaying capital investment­s, cutting expenses and reducing employment levels, profitabil­ity has plummeted,” said the Conference Board’s Michael Burt. “However, these cost-cutting efforts should begin to bear fruit next year as the industry is expected to slowly return to profitabil­ity, even as oil prices remain low by recent standards.”

U.S. benchmark crude oil prices have spent much of 2015 languishin­g below the $50US-a-barrel mark — dropping below $44US a barrel in recent days, about 60 per cent lower than its 2014 high.

The Conference Board outlook comes a day after the NDP government of resource-reliant Alberta delivered its first budget — with a $6.1-billion deficit and a plan to borrow money to cover day-to-day programs.

“The realities of a resource-concentrat­ed economy knocked down by weak oil prices will thrust Alberta more heavily into the debt markets over the next few years to fund deficits and capital projects while still preserving government-funded programs and services as well as the Alberta Advantage,” CIBC economists wrote in a report Tuesday following the budget’s release.

The Alberta Advantage was a slogan during the tenure of the late premier Ralph Klein touting the province as a good place to do business.

Just as Albertans were chewing over the latest budget numbers, European energy giant Royal Dutch Shell announced its Carmon Creek oilsands project in northweste­rn Alberta would be scrapped and it would take a $2-billion charge against its third-quarter earnings as a result. Shell cited a lack of pipeline access to global markets as one reason why Carmon Creek no longer ranks among its other projects.

On Wednesday, Oklahoma-based Devon Energy said it cut 15 per cent of its Canadian workforce — about 200 positions — as spending is expected to remain “lower than historic lows for the foreseeabl­e future,” said spokeswoma­n Nadine Barber.

Meanwhile, oilsands producer MEG Energy posted a quarterly net loss of $427.5 million, widening from a net loss of $101 million in the same period last year. Over the past year, the company has trimmed about 30 per cent of its workforce, including employees and contractor­s.

On the bright side, MEG said it’s managed to knock its net operating costs down to $9.10 a barrel, compared with $10.31 last year.

 ??  ?? Pumpjacks bring crude oil to the surface near Halkirk, Alta.
Pumpjacks bring crude oil to the surface near Halkirk, Alta.

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