Hearings begin for major Teck oilsands proposal
Fresh off a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the $17-billion Fort Hills oilsands project, Teck Resources Ltd. is moving ahead with its next major oilsands investment. Beginning Tuesday, Vancouverbased Teck will have a team in Fort McMurray for a five-week, jointreview panel regulatory hearing by Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency and Alberta Energy Regulator into its wholly owned 260,000-barrels-per-day Frontier oilsands mine — a massive greenfield project north of Fort Hills. Teck CEO Don Lindsay was in Fort McMurray earlier this month to officially open the 194,000-bpd Fort Hills oilsands mine, in which his company has a 21.3 per cent stake. Suncor Energy Inc. and Paris-based Total SA own 54.1 per cent and 24.6 per cent respectively. The new project could be a financial stretch. Frontier carries an estimated $20-billion price tag, which would make it slightly more expensive than Teck’s own market capitalization of $18 billion. Teck has indicated it wants to proceed with the project once it has regulatory approvals and aims to start producing oil from an 85,000-bpd first phase in 2026, with a second phase 10 years later. Analysts have speculated that the company could find a partner to finance Frontier’s massive capital costs, especially since Teck has sought partners for other mining projects after guiding those projects through the regulatory process. For example, it is seeking a partner for the $4.8-billion second phase of its recently approved Quebrada Blanca copper mine in Chile.
“Our current focus is on successfully advancing Frontier through the regulatory review process,” Teck spokesperson Chris Stannell said in an email.
“Any further decision around the project will depend on factors including the outcome of that process, market conditions and other considerations,” he said. “This would include looking at partnership options. We have experience in partnerships to successfully develop oilsands projects through our involvement in the recently completed Fort Hills oilsands project, and this is clearly a strong option for advancing such projects.”
Given the current regulatory timeline, the company is currently tracking toward a final investment decision on Frontier by the middle of 2019, CIBC World Markets analyst Oscar Cabrera said in a research note.