The Borneo Post

As sun sets on Canada energy, Grafton eyes renewables

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I’m worried about the future of the industry in general. It’s going to be a great business for a period of time, but I do look at it as a sun-setting business – one where we’ll see competitio­n and disruption from outside our industry.

GRAFTON Asset Management Inc., a firm that has brought foreign investment into Canada’s oil and gas industry, is looking to add alternativ­e energy to its portfolio for the first time as it positions itself for the decline of fossil fuels.

“I’m worried about the future of the industry in general,” Geeta Sankappana­var, president and chief operating officer of the Calgary-based investment firm, said in a phone interview on Tuesday. “It’s going to be a great business for a period of time, but I do look at it as a sun- setting business – one where we’ll see competitio­n and disruption from outside our industry.”

Oil and gas companies have had to cut investment and fire workers to weather the worst price crash in a generation. As crude rebounds after the Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other major exporters pledged to cut output, some producers like Cenovus Energy Inc. are resuming expansion plans. But prices are still half their peak level in mid-2014.

Sankappana­var expects the oil and gas industry’s recovery to be muted compared with previous cycles and is looking at financing

Geeta Sankappana­var, president and chief operating officer of the Calgary-based investment firm

more environmen­tally friendly and renewable power projects across Canada, including natural gas plants and biomass facilities. The company plans to attract capital from global investors to diversify its asset base.

A majority of Grafton’s capital comes from the Middle East, Europe and the US

Grafton has about C$ 1 billion ( RM3.4 billion) in assets under management, of which C$ 900 million is focused on direct investment­s in the Canadian oil and gas sector and the remaining C$ 100 million is invested through its Grafton Energy Opportunit­ies equity fund. The fund returned 65 percent last year through November, according to preliminar­y, unaudited figures from the company. That’s more than double the 30 per cent gain for the S& P/TSX energy sector index over the same span.

The firm’s equity portfolio includes oilfield services provider Canyon Services Group and producers Kelt Exploratio­n and Seven Generation­s Energy. Seven Generation­s more than doubled last year, while Canyon and Kelt rose 73 per cent and 60 per cent, respective­ly.

Canyon fell 0.3 per cent to C$ 7.37 at 11.23am in Toronto. Kelt gained 4.1 per cent, while Seven Generation­s dropped 2.5 per cent.

While a rebound in oil prices is helping producers emerge from the downturn, selling Alberta’s energy sector to the world remains tricky as the high- cost operations struggle to remain competitiv­e, she said. Uncertaint­y over Alberta’s tax regime and carbon pricing also deter foreign investors, she said.

“In Alberta, I think we’re going to get the rising tide effect from higher oil prices, but we need to figure out a way to differenti­ate ourselves in order to attract that investment,” Sankappana­var, 42, said. Oil majors including Royal Dutch Shell and Statoil have been selling Western Canadian properties to focus on more profitable prospects elsewhere.

Grafton has stayed away from investing in assets that are already producing.

Instead, the firm’s strategy is to look for those that look promising for what they hold below ground, even if projects face challenges and would take three to five years to start output.

 ?? — WPBloomber­g photo ?? A map of the oil sands is displayed at the Oil Sands Discovery Centre in Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada, on June 3, 2015.
— WPBloomber­g photo A map of the oil sands is displayed at the Oil Sands Discovery Centre in Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada, on June 3, 2015.

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