Calgary Herald

Canadian crude prices starting to rebound from historic lows

- KEVIN ORLAND

The Canadian energy industry may not be popping champagne just yet, but a rebound in local crude prices may offer some reasons for hope.

With producers like Cenovus Energy Inc. shipping more oil by rail and U.S. refineries starting back up after a heavy maintenanc­e season, Canadian crude has recovered some of its historic losses.

Since hitting a record low on Nov. 15, the spot price of heavy Western Canada Select has risen 35 per cent, or US$4.65 a barrel.

“It’s not that our constraint­s have gone away, but they are pretty stable,” said Joan Pinto, an energy specialist at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.

As WCS has been climbing, the West Texas Intermedia­te benchmark has been falling in the U.S., driven by increased supplies and speculatio­n that OPEC may forgo a production cut at its next meeting.

The combinatio­n of rising WCS and falling WTI has narrowed the gap between the two grades by 22 per cent, or about US$9.50 a barrel, since the middle of the month. The differenti­al — an important gauge used in Alberta government budget projection­s — has shrunk by about a third from its record of US$50 a barrel last month.

Futures prices indicate that WCS will continue gradually recovering, narrowing the differenti­al, currently at US$33.50 a barrel, to about US$25 by May, Pinto said.

Still, despite the recent rebound, WCS prices are well below longterm averages, and new pipelines won’t be coming online until late next year at the earliest. That will reduce cash flow for producers and prompt some to keep part of their output shut in until prices recover further. “Producers are still hurting,” Pinto said.

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