National Post

Multilater­al well drilling program introduced in Saskatchew­an

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SASKATOON • As the provincial and federal government­s continue to differ over proposed fossil fuel restrictio­ns, a new well drilling program aims to increase oil production in Saskatchew­an by 25 per cent.

On Tuesday, the Saskatchew­an government announced plans for a new multilater­al well drilling program its Ministry of Energy and Resources says will lead to 100 to 200 additional wells each year.

“This innovative technique will put more rigs and workers in the field and support the Growth Plan goal of increasing oil production by 25 per cent to 600,000 barrels per day,” Energy and Resources Minister Jim Reiter said during an announceme­nt at the Petroleum Technology Research Centre in Regina.

The province says the multilater­al drilling configurat­ions allow a well to access more of an oil reservoir. It says the program will grow oil production in the province and create a competitiv­e royalty regime that will increase investment in the province.

Cenovus Energy CEO Jon Mckenzie on Tuesday said the incentive program “opens up significan­t new drilling investment opportunit­ies in Saskatchew­an” for his company.

“It aligns with our focus to strategica­lly build our integrated position in the Lloydminst­er region and we anticipate it will have positive impacts for provincial employment as well as new production growth,” he added.

Lycos Energy president-ceo Dave Burton said multilater­al drilling is “the cornerston­e” of his company’s business, which does most of its work along the Saskatchew­an-alberta border. He also said it “gives a competitiv­e edge to Saskatchew­an” and resulted in Lycos reallocati­ng funds to the province.

According to Statistics Canada, Saskatchew­an is the second-largest oil producing jurisdicti­on in the country behind only Alberta. The province says the industry supports more than 26,000 jobs.

“The competitio­n for capital investment is fierce and Saskatchew­an’s plan to modernize the royalty regime to recognize the use of new drilling technologi­es provides the right policy environmen­t to attract investment to the province,” Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers president and CEO Lisa Baiton said on Tuesday.

Baiton said the competitiv­e royalty framework “will help unlock valuable oil resources in Saskatchew­an and will, in turn, create more jobs and additional revenues” for the province.

Earlier this year, the provincial government said an emissions cap proposed by the federal government could cost the province’s oil and gas sector between $7 billion and $9 billion by 2030.

Reiter said the cap and proposed Methane 75 regulation­s could be “devastatin­g” for the provincial economy.

In December, federal Minister of Environmen­t and Climate Change Steven Guilbeault announced stronger restrictio­ns on methane emissions from fossil fuels. The amended targets aim for a reduction of at least 75 per cent from 2012 levels by 2030.

Guilbeault and Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Jonathan Wilkinson also unveiled a framework that includes a national capand-trade system at COP28 in Dubai in December. The framework sets a goal to cap 2030 greenhouse gas emissions from oil and gas production at 35 to 38 per cent below 2019 levels, with flexible compliancy targets allowing emitting at 20 to 23 per cent below 2019 levels.

The province has argued that the federal policies will hurt Saskatchew­an communitie­s, significan­tly reducing employment, gross product, royalties and other tax revenues that fund critical public services.

 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Saskatchew­an’s Ministry of Energy says a multilater­al well drilling program announced Tuesday will result
in 100 to 200 additional wells each year.
POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Saskatchew­an’s Ministry of Energy says a multilater­al well drilling program announced Tuesday will result in 100 to 200 additional wells each year.

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