Calgary Herald

MORE BAD NEWS IN FORECAST

Oil and gas in for another down year

- LAUREN KRUGEL

A pair of forecasts released Thursday see little in the way of good news for Canada’s ailing oil and gas sector.

The Petroleum Services Associatio­n of Canada predicts drilling activity will be 36 per cent lower than what it anticipate­d just six months ago, with only 3,315 wells drilled in 2016. It’s the second time the forecast has been revised downward since November.

“These are dire times for the Canadian oilfield service, supply and manufactur­ing sector, with no indicators for positive change in the near future,” PSAC CEO Mark Salkeld said in a release.

“The last two drilling seasons were pretty much non-existent. What a lot of people don’t realize is when the oil and gas sector is not working, oilfield services companies are tools down and there is no cash flow.

“This is unlike our customers, the producers, who can still generate some revenue, however dismal, from production.”

Meanwhile, a new report from the Conference Board of Canada says the country’s oil and gas industry is expected to be in the red for the second year in a row.

But the pre-tax losses for 2016 aren’t expected to be as severe as last year and the sector is on track to return to profitabil­ity in 2017.

The Ottawa-based economic think-tank predicts Canadian oil producers will collective­ly lose more than $3 billion this year, an improvemen­t from last year’s record $7 billion loss.

The price of West Texas Intermedia­te crude, the key U.S. benchmark, is projected to rise from US$39 a barrel this year to around US$65 a barrel in 2020.

The natural gas extraction industry is expected to incur losses of $1 billion this year, a slight improvemen­t from the $1.1 billion hole last year.

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 ?? NEXEN ?? Drilling activity will be 36 per cent lower than anticipate­d, reports the Petroleum Services Associatio­n of Canada, the second time since November the forecast has been revised downward.
NEXEN Drilling activity will be 36 per cent lower than anticipate­d, reports the Petroleum Services Associatio­n of Canada, the second time since November the forecast has been revised downward.

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