CNRL wants Alberta oil curbs lifted for summer
Output usually reduced for maintenance
Canadian Natural Resources Ltd ., Canada’ s biggest oil producer, wants Alberta to consider eliminating its restrictions on crude output in the summer.
Alberta has curtailed production for more than a year due to congested pipelines. Many producers reduce output anyway during summer to conduct maintenance.
For that reason, lifting government-ordered curtailments from May until October may make sense, CNRL president Tim Mckay said in an interview with Reuters.
Alberta’s oil inventories last year steadily drained during the same period until a leak on the Keystone pipeline in late October backed up supplies again, Mckay said. Inventories are likely to similarly decrease this summer as oilsands firms conduct maintenance, he said.
“It might be an opportunity for the government to get extra revenues,” Mckay said, referring to the royalties it collects.
Spokespersons for Premier Jason Kenney and Energy Minister Sonya Savage could not be immediately reached.
Alberta is restricting production to 3.81 million bar
OPPORTUNITY FOR THE GOVERNMENT TO GET EXTRA REVENUES.
rels per day in March and April. It has not announced later production levels.
CNRL shares dipped 1.6 per cent in Toronto to close at $ 32.58, touching a nearly six-month low.
The Calgary- based company missed fourth- quarter profit estimates as it took a hit from lower oil prices.
It said executive vicechair Steve Laut would retire by May, but remain on the board of directors.
The company cut its 2020 capital expenditure by $ 100 million to $ 3.95 billion, citing volatile crude oil prices, and increased its quarterly dividend by 13 per cent.
Mckay said the main impact of the global spread of the novel coronavirus was in pressuring oil prices due to fears of lost demand, and CNRL had not noticed any sales reductions, he said. “The pipelines are still full.”
Quarterly production rose seven per cent to 1.2 million barrels of oil equivalent per day ( boepd) as producers were allowed exemptions on Alberta’s curtailments if they committed to move oil by rail instead of pipelines.
CNRL reported net income of $ 597 million, or 50 cents per share, in the fourth quarter, compared with a net loss of $ 776 million, or 64 cents per share, a year earlier. On an adjusted basis, the firm earned 58 cents per share, missing analysts’ average estimate of 70 cents, according to Refinitiv IBES data.