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Historic price crash plunges Canadian oil patch into crisis

Heavy Canadian crude on a downward spiral since mid-May

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CALGARY: While the US oil industry has hit a speed bump with the recent US$20 drop in oil prices in New York, producers in Canada are in a full-blown crisis.

Heavy Canadian crude has been on a downward spiral since mid-May, with prices plummeting by more than 60% as an onslaught of new production from the oilsands overwhelms the nation’s pipelines.

In the past two months, the decline accelerate­d as many of the US refineries that processed all that oil shut down for maintenanc­e.

The result is the worst pricing environmen­t in the Canadian oil industry’s history and a disaster for a sector that accounts for about a 10th of the nation’s economy and a fifth of its exports. The crisis is threatenin­g oil producers’ profits, causing deep divisions within the industry and putting pressure on Justin Trudeau’s government to act.

Adding to the gloom is the relatively positive outlook for the US energy industry is enjoying.

“In my 36 years in this business, I have never seen such a wide differenti­al in sentiment between Canada and the United States,” Kevin Neveu, chief executive officer of oilfield-service company Precision Drilling Corp, said in an interview in Calgary.

“I’ve never seen more frustratio­n among our customers and our competitor­s and in our peer-group companies than right now.”

Western Canada Select crude – the main blend sold by the nation’s prolific oil sands – closed at US$13.46 a barrel on Thursday, the lowest in Bloomberg data stretching back to 2008. The blend’s discount to US benchmark crude exploded to as much as US$52.40 a barrel last month, also a record.

While the price has recovered somewhat in recent weeks as some US refining capacity has come back online, the crisis is far from over. The nation is still producing more oil than its pipelines can handle and its storage capacity is filled to the brim.

That has prompted some Canadian producers to take extraordin­ary steps, like shutting down some of their production, striking deals to ship oil via costlier rail and even asking Alberta Premier Rachel Notley, head of the country’s top oil-producing province, to mandate output cuts until the glut of oil is cleared.

That idea has caused a rift in the industry, pitting mostly pure producers like Canadian Natural Resources Ltd, Cenovus Energy Inc and MEG Energy Corp, who have been hammered by the low prices, against the large, integrated oil companies like Suncor Energy Inc and Husky Energy Inc, who have their own refining capacity and are mostly unscathed by the situation.

The split has put Notley, a centre-left politician in a traditiona­lly conservati­ve province, in a bind. While she has yet to take a position on whether to mandate production cuts, she has hinted the possibilit­y isn’t off the table.

Meanwhile, she has appointed three special envoys to come up with short-term solutions for the crisis, accelerate­d efforts to build new refining and upgrading capacity in the prov- ince, pressed Trudeau’s government for help in ramping up the nation’s capacity to ship oil by rail and pushed it to speed constructi­on of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, one of the major projects that could alleviate the nation’s pipeline bottleneck­s.

But it’s not just Alberta’s government that’s being hit by the crisis. The situation poses challenges for Canada more broadly, with estimates that the wider discount on local crude is costing the country C$80mil (US$60mil) to C$100mil a day. That is already sapping growth forecasts nationally, raising pressure on Trudeau to come to the rescue.

Trudeau has no silver bullets, though. His government already bought a beleaguere­d oil pipeline expansion project this year in a bid to save it, only to be dealt a fresh delay by a court ruling.

He has tried to push through pipelines as well as tougher environmen­tal measures, such as a carbon tax, as a package deal.

Now the crisis in the oil patch threatens support for his environmen­tal efforts that were supposed to go hand-in-hand and is keeping the pressure on him to find quick fixes for a problem that has built up over years.

“The market as we see it today is broken and dysfunctio­nal,” Canadian Natural vice chairman Steve Laut, urging a temporary cut in production to boost prices, said in an interview with BNN Bloomberg Television. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Speed bump: An oil pump jack seen in a field near Calgary, Alberta. The crisis is threatenin­g oil producers’ profits, causing deep divisions within the industry. — Reuters
Speed bump: An oil pump jack seen in a field near Calgary, Alberta. The crisis is threatenin­g oil producers’ profits, causing deep divisions within the industry. — Reuters

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