Toronto Star

Oilsands giants restrain spending

Energy companies faced with pipeline bottleneck­s

- KEVIN ORLAND

Capital spending in Canada’s oilsands reserves look set to continue to dwindle as pipeline bottleneck­s persist and the Alberta government’s production limits remain in place.

Husky Energy Inc. said early Monday that it’s cutting capital spending for 2020 and 2021by a total of $500 million, and Suncor Energy Inc. said later in the day that it’s keeping spending on oil-related projects flat.

While other major producers have yet to release spending plans for next year, the projection­s from Husky and Suncor show energy companies may continue to focus on wringing more profit from their existing output, rather than plowing money into churning out more barrels. After a year in which Canadian oil companies’ output was cut by mandatory production limits, Suncor is projecting a five per cent production increase for next year, while Husky sees a four per cent boost.

“We will continue to focus on value over volume,” Suncor chief executive officer Mark Little said in a statement. Suncor’s overall capital budget is increasing next year, but the added spending is being directed toward initiative­s to increase the company’s free funds flow, such as a cogenerati­on facility, digital technology initiative­s and a bidirectio­nal pipeline.

The oilsands, which contain the world’s third-largest crude reserves, have struggled to recover from the 2014-16 downturn and a shortage of pipeline space that has weighed on prices and restrained production growth. Capital spending in the oilsands already was set to decline for the fifth straight year, to $12 billion this year from $33.9 billion in 2014, according to the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers.

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