Calgary Herald

Imperial Oil, BP in limbo after Arctic drilling freeze

- JOSH WINGROVE AND ROBERT TUTTLE

Energy firms including Imperial Oil and BP will get a year of consultati­ons to hash out the fate of their rights in the Arctic after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s drilling freeze set the stage for a dispute over license extensions.

Trudeau and U.S. President Barack Obama said this week they would designate most of North American Arctic waters off-limits to new activity, including all future oil and gas licensing in Canadian waters. Trudeau’s government said existing licences wouldn’t be affected, but initially offered scant detail.

Five companies — Imperial, BP, ConocoPhil­lips, Chevron Corp. and Franklin Petroleum Canada Ltd. — hold active exploratio­n licences in Canada’s share of the Beaufort Sea, where there currently isn’t any oil production. Many of those licences expire within the next five years, when Trudeau has pledged to review his moratorium.

Companies remain eligible to upgrade their existing licences, and some may seek extensions, which will be a central issue in talks between government and the industry over the next year.

“It’s their intention to have discussion­s with each of the active licence holders,” said Paul Barnes, Atlantic Canada and Arctic manager for the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers.

“I suspect most companies would still want to maintain an active licence there” or seek an extension “until such time as the government has another review.”

The exploratio­n licences due to expire over the next five years were issued in 2012 when crude hovered around $100 a barrel, nearly double its current price. “Companies have been walking away from their leases in the North American market, or seeking extensions of those leases because they can’t justify any expenditur­e on those leases at current pricing,” said Michael Byers, a UBC professor who studies Arctic issues.

All five companies have exploratio­n licences in the Beaufort Sea that expire between 2019 and 2023. Of those, only closely held Franklin has permits that extend past the five-year window. Barnes said exploratio­n has been quiet of late, with no drilling since 2012.

All but Franklin also hold additional permits known as significan­t discovery licences in the Beaufort issued as far back as the 1980s. Those types of permits, which don’t expire and are a precursor to production licences, are also held across northern Canada by Suncor Energy, Paramount Resources, Devon Energy, Nytis Exploratio­n Company Canada and others, government records show.

There are no current offshore production licences in Canada’s Arctic waters.

In its joint statement with the U.S. this week, the Liberal government ruled out “future offshore Arctic oil and gas licensing” and later said existing permits won’t be affected. It didn’t specify what happens next for licence holders.

“Current licences are not impacted,” said Sabrina Williams, a spokeswoma­n for Indigenous and Northern Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett, the lead minister for Arctic developmen­t. Williams said the government “will determine next steps after consultati­on with industry and other interested stakeholde­rs.”

The consultati­ons will be conducted over one year by Bennett and Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr. In the meantime, companies with exploratio­n licences can still “accede to Significan­t Discovery within their existing permit timelines,” Williams said, meaning offshore oil developmen­t can still potentiall­y continue in the Arctic after the Trudeau and Obama announceme­nt.

The terms of Obama’s ban, which applies to most of the U.S. share of the Beaufort Sea, is also unclear as he prepares to leave office. The path for a legal challenge from the incoming administra­tion of president-elect Donald Trump is murky.

Northwest Territorie­s Premier Bob McLeod has objected to his northern region, the shores of which are nearest to much of the existing licensed exploratio­n areas, being shut out of talks that led to the Arctic offshore freeze. He said he expects companies that already hold permits will be rejected if they apply for extensions.

“I’d be very surprised if they’re not turned back,” McLeod said Tuesday, shortly after he spoke with Trudeau about the new measures. “If oil and gas is shut down, then we need to look at diversifyi­ng our economies. And we need to have sustainabl­e developmen­t in the North.”

Imperial has previously called for extending the terms of exploratio­n licences “to ensure future oil and gas activities are conducted in an appropriat­ely paced, safe and environmen­tally responsibl­e manner,” spokeswoma­n Killeen Kelly said in a statement this week, acknowledg­ing uncertaint­y around the measures so far. “With respect to existing licenses we will work to understand the implicatio­ns to our business, if any.”

Chevron referred questions to CAPP, the lobby group. ConocoPhil­lips declined to comment; BP and Franklin didn’t immediatel­y respond to queries.

Some existing licence holders may seek extensions, Barnes said, but Arctic offshore developmen­t has always been a long-term propositio­n.

“They aren’t short term. They are potentiall­y medium term but likely longer term,” CAPP President Tim McMillan said. “Each ecosystem is unique and needs to be looked at specifical­ly.”

I suspect most companies would still want to maintain an active licence there ... until such time as the government has another review.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The oil drilling rig Polar Pioneer is towed toward a dock in Elliott Bay in Seattle in May 2015. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Barack Obama have ordered that most of North American Arctic waters be placed off limits to new oil...
ELAINE THOMPSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The oil drilling rig Polar Pioneer is towed toward a dock in Elliott Bay in Seattle in May 2015. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Barack Obama have ordered that most of North American Arctic waters be placed off limits to new oil...

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