Vancouver Sun

BP mulls sale of oilsands assets

- JOHN TILAK AND NIA WILLIAMS

BP Plc is considerin­g the sale of its stakes in three oilsands projects, people familiar with the matter say, as part of the British oil company’s strategy of retreating from noncore businesses.

BP’s 50-per-cent stake in the Sunrise project near Fort McMurray, Alta., where Husky Energy Inc. owns the rest and is the operator, is the most valuable of the three assets. BP’S Sunrise stake is valued at about $1.09 billion, based on recent transactio­ns in the sector.

It also owns a 50-percent stake in Pike, operated by Devon Energy Corp, which is still awaiting a final investment decision, and is majority-owner of the Terre de Grace oilsands pilot project. All three projects are located in northeaste­rn Alberta.

A BP spokesman declined to comment. Sources declined to be named as the informatio­n is confidenti­al.

BP has discussed with advisers the possibilit­y of selling the stakes, though no final decision has been made, the people added.

If the sale proceeds, BP would deploy capital in more attractive regions, such as the Permian basin in the United States, where the rate of return tends to be higher, one of the people said.

BP’s planned move comes after other global energy majors, including ConocoPhil­lips and Royal Dutch Shell, have cut their exposure to Canada’s oilsands operations, which are among the world’s most expensive oil plays to develop.

Faced with a lower oil price environmen­t and challengin­g economics, which include high cost operations and carbon taxes, global players are increasing­ly put off by the oilsands.

Reuters reported last week that U.S. oil producer Chevron Corp was exploring the sale of its 20-per-cent stake in the Athabasca Oil Sands project, which could fetch about $3.3 billion.

BP is focusing its operations in Egypt, Azerbaijan, the Gulf of Mexico, the North Sea and Trinidad in the coming years.

Husky said in February that current production at the Sunrise project is about 36,000 barrels of oil per day.

It is in the process of ramping up the project to full capacity of 60,000 bpd but progress has been slower than expected and the company is drilling extra wells to try to speed up production. Husky lowered the 2017 production forecast to 40,000-44,000 bpd from 60,000 bpd.

While Husky is not keen to increase its exposure to the oilsands, it may consider buying BP’s stake if the price is attractive, two sources said.

Husky spokesman Mel Duvall declined to comment on whether the company had discussed buying BP’s stake in Sunrise.

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