Toronto Star

Oil booming just down Hwy. 401

Low crude prices can’t slow production in Oil Springs, North America’s first well

- ROBERT TUTTLE BLOOMBERG

Charlie Fairbank, the great grandson of one of the world’s first oilmen, has turned to a century-old technology to keep his 350 Ontario oil wells competitiv­e in a world of $35 (U.S.) crude.

Using a single engine and wooden jerkers — rods that connect to multiple pumps — Fairbank is producing the same 65 barrels a day his family has been extracting since the 19th century in Oil Springs, birthplace of the Petroleum Age.

It’s there that asphalt seller James Miller Williams struck oil in 1858, a year before Edwin Drake drilled his famous well in Titusville, Penn.

“If careful, we got another 100 years,” Fairbank, 74, said in an interview from Oil Springs, about 300 kilometres west of Toronto.

“We use old wooden jerkers that bring down maintenanc­e costs considerab­ly.”

While Ontario’s fortunes as a world oil centre have long faded, small producers like Fairbank are demonstrat­ing a rare resilience amid the lowest prices in a decade.

Crude production here will rise about 14 per cent this year, albeit to just 1,214 barrels a day, according to the National Energy Board. That’s expected to be the biggest increase of any province, as wells are shuttered from Alberta to Saskatchew­an.

Oil and gas in Ontario is pumped from about 2,500 wells dotted along the shore of Lake Erie, many producing less than a barrel a day, Frank Kuri, president of Ontario Petroleum Institute, said. Some wells have been producing for more than a century and oil can be pulled up for as little as $10 a barrel, he added.

While many Ontario producers are small private companies, such as Fairbank Oil Fields, there are a few publicly listed firms producing here, including Toronto-based Dundee Energy Ltd., Simcoe-based Metalore Resources Ltd. and the Abu Dhabi National Energy Co.’s TAQA North.

Close-to-the-surface crude, low royalty rates and well-developed infrastruc­ture help keep costs low, according to Kuri. Royalty rates are about13 per cent, versus as high as 40 per cent in Alberta, and unlike in other parts of Canada, a large portion of onshore mineral rights are privately held.

As Alberta producers struggle to get pipelines built to deliver their crude to markets, Ontario oil companies are close to major fuel markets.

Producers ship most of their crude by truck to the Imperial Oil Ltd. refinery in Sarnia, with some going to the American Refining Group Inc.’s plant in Bradford, Penn., Kuri said.

Low oil prices may even help stimulate interest, as companies look toward regions where oil can be produced profitably, even at lower volumes, said Hugh Moran, executive director of OPI.

“When prices started to drop, I got calls from industry folks indicating that this could be good for Ontario,” Moran said.

“When you look at the Bakken, the costs are immensely higher than here,” he said, in reference to the large producing region in North Dakota and Saskatchew­an, where break-even prices range from $30 to $65 a barrel.

While $30 may not be high enough to stimulate exploratio­n, $45 is ade- quate, Moran said. Kuri estimated that crude output could be boosted back to 5,000 barrels a day, the peak reached in 1995. The Utica shale, which extends under parts of Ontario, is untested but may prove lucrative further into the future, he said.

Drillers would have to be hungry. The province has establishe­d and potential oil reserves of only about 40 million barrels, according to data from the Ontario Oil, Gas & Salt Resources Library. That’s roughly equal to four days of Saudi production and compares with as much as166 billion barrels of reserves in Alberta’s oilsands, government data show.

Fairbank is ever optimistic. “I do believe there is a lot of oil to be discovered in Ontario.”

But making money isn’t all that matters, he said.

“We are very ancient and historic,” he said. “We are trying to pay homage to what has gone before and created this industry.”

 ?? JESSICA MCDIARMID PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR ?? “If careful, we got another 100 years,” Charlie Fairbank says of his 350 oil wells, which produce 65 barrels a day.
JESSICA MCDIARMID PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR “If careful, we got another 100 years,” Charlie Fairbank says of his 350 oil wells, which produce 65 barrels a day.
 ??  ?? Low royalty rates, oil that is close to the surface and developed infrastruc­ture help keep costs low.
Low royalty rates, oil that is close to the surface and developed infrastruc­ture help keep costs low.

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