Rachel Notley calls oilsands a 'tremendous asset'

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,817
471
83
I actually posted content from the article and criticized that, not the fact that this came from Ezra's mother's basement.
 

captain morgan

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 28, 2009
28,429
148
63
A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
Teck Resources has shut down a $20 billion oil sands project in Alberta. Low oil prices and rising labour costs didn't help, but it's obvious the final straw was the new NDP government.

Obvious, maybe not, but understandable, you bet.

Seeing how Teck's tax bill has increased by 20%, it's safe to say that the economics have changed drastically.

Next step for Notley is to increase royalty rates and later wonder why more groups don't extract oil or gas.... I'm certain that it will remain a mystery to the NDP as to why this occurs
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,817
471
83
Obvious, maybe not, but understandable, you bet.

Seeing how Teck's tax bill has increased by 20%, it's safe to say that the economics have changed drastically.

Next step for Notley is to increase royalty rates and later wonder why more groups don't extract oil or gas.... I'm certain that it will remain a mystery to the NDP as to why this occurs

Lol

This was happening since last year and I even made posts about it.

This is your free market at work and if that's your philosophy, then you should man up and stop making excuses when oil takes a nose dive.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
118,620
14,561
113
Low Earth Orbit
After 8 years of being overinflated by OPEC, oil is right where it should be . ha ha ha snicker ha ha.

How are the iron ore sales coming along?
 

captain morgan

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 28, 2009
28,429
148
63
A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
Lol

This was happening since last year and I even made posts about it.

This is your free market at work and if that's your philosophy, then you should man up and stop making excuses when oil takes a nose dive.

The free market is working and Teck is an excellent example. In addition to the commodity prices being low, the general business environment in AB has seen an erosion in their competitiveness as compared to neighboring locales.

Teck has money to spend, and they have made the decision to deploy those funds somewhere else where they can receive a better return.

You only fooling yourself if you believe this is only about a low price of oil..... Oil is the same price (basically) everywhere in NorAm, so the real decision factors relate to other elements.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
118,620
14,561
113
Low Earth Orbit
Canadian oil ‘discount’ hits $31 in U.S. Midwest

The so-called Canadian discount on crude oil jumped above $30 a barrel this month, thanks to a lack of pipeline capacity to the West Coast and a glut of oil supply at refineries in the U.S. Midwest.

That means a barrel of Western Canada heavy oil, including production from Alberta’s oilsands, is selling this month for about $75 compared to a world price of about $107 for heavy oil. Heavy oil, laden with sulphur, requires more processing than so-called light sweet crudes, which are fetching about $125 a barrel this week on world markets.

The numbers come from Scotiabank analyst Patricia Mohr’s monthly commodities index report, issued Tuesday.

The absence of a pipeline to carry Western heavy crude from Alberta to the British Columbia coast and ultimately to alternative markets such as Asia, combined with pipeline bottlenecks in the United States, means Alberta producers have to accept discounted prices
 

captain morgan

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 28, 2009
28,429
148
63
A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
Canadian oil ‘discount’ hits $31 in U.S. Midwest

The so-called Canadian discount on crude oil jumped above $30 a barrel this month, thanks to a lack of pipeline capacity to the West Coast and a glut of oil supply at refineries in the U.S. Midwest.

That means a barrel of Western Canada heavy oil, including production from Alberta’s oilsands, is selling this month for about $75 compared to a world price of about $107 for heavy oil. Heavy oil, laden with sulphur, requires more processing than so-called light sweet crudes, which are fetching about $125 a barrel this week on world markets.

The numbers come from Scotiabank analyst Patricia Mohr’s monthly commodities index report, issued Tuesday.

The absence of a pipeline to carry Western heavy crude from Alberta to the British Columbia coast and ultimately to alternative markets such as Asia, combined with pipeline bottlenecks in the United States, means Alberta producers have to accept discounted prices

Agreed on all the factors listed above re: transport, capacity, etc.

Look at this one though: Market Statistics | PSAC

Western Canada Select @ CAD 50.72
vs
WTI (Cushing) Spot Price @ USD 52.74

Do the math on the exchange rate and you'll be hard pressed to see a 23% lower price for WCS
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,817
471
83
And back in the real world...


Teck Resources delays Frontier oil sands project by five years - The Globe and Mail
Home - The Globe and Mail

Teck Resources Ltd. is delaying the planned startup of a multibillion-dollar oil sands mine by at least five years, becoming the latest company to push back development as shaky energy markets threaten profits in the high-cost sector.

Vancouver-based Teck told regulators that production from its proposed Frontier oil sands mine about 110 kilometres north of Fort McMurray, Alta., won’t start until 2026, instead of 2021 as originally planned. The company now says it will build the 260,000-barrel-a-day mine in two phases instead of four, with construction starting in 2019, according to an update filed with the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency.

The moves are fresh evidence of a broader pullback under way in northern Alberta, as oil prices show no sign of recovering to triple-digit territory – a threshold analysts say is needed to justify new mining developments such as Frontier.

Teck, which has not committed to building the mega-mine, has pegged the cost of Frontier at roughly $20.6-billion, making it one of the most expensive oil sands projects contemplated to date. Such developments are increasingly giving way to smaller, steam-driven projects, as the industry adapts to crude prices that remain at about half levels of recent years.

“The prospect of mining projects going ahead in this environment, or even an improvement from this environment, is pretty unlikely, if at all,” said Chris Cox, analyst at Raymond James Ltd. in Calgary.

“I put it as very unlikely that it actually gets approved, unless we see triple-digit oil prices again.”

U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate oil edged up 2.2 per cent to $52.78 (U.S.) a barrel on Thursday, despite lingering concerns over the Greek economic crisis and a possible slowdown in Chinese demand.

Earlier this week, those fears pushed U.S. prices to a three-month low of $50.58 a barrel, snuffing out expectations of a wider rebound in energy markets.

Teck’s move adds to a long list of companies that have slammed the brakes on big-ticket projects since the commodity slump intensified, triggering waves of layoffs and budget cuts.

Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. and their competitors have put off investments in several expansions, collectively shaving more than one million barrels a day from the energy industry’s long-term production outlook. Oil sands investment is expected to fall by a third from levels a year ago, to $23-billion (Canadian), according to industry data.

The abrupt downturn has hit oil-rich Alberta hard, eclipsing expectations set as recently as April.

On Thursday, economists at Toronto-Dominion Bank said the hit to capital spending in the energy sector so far has been “more swift and pronounced” than initially expected. The bank now expects the provincial economy to contract this year by 0.9 per cent in real terms, compared with an April forecast of 0.5 per cent growth.

Despite headwinds, production from the oil sands is expected to climb by 800,000 barrels a day by 2020 as projects under construction come on stream, according to consultancy IHS Cera.

Those include Fort Hills, a $13.5-billion oil sands mine under construction about 90 kilometres north of Fort McMurray, Alta. The project, led by Suncor Energy Inc., is due to add 180,000 barrels a day of new capacity in northern Alberta starting in late 2017.

Teck, which holds a 20-per-cent stake in the venture, has committed about $3-billion to the development, even as the diversified miner faces pressure from sinking prices for coal and copper.

In April, Teck slashed its semi-annual dividend by two-thirds to 15 cents a share. A month later, it announced the temporary shutdowns of six metallurgical coal mines in Western Canada to cope with weak prices and glut of supply in the market.

Teck initially applied to build Frontier in 2011. A spokesman for the company said the decision to push back startup was made to accommodate updates to the project. The new timeline is contingent on regulatory approval, economic conditions and a green light from Teck’s board, Chris Stannell said in an e-mail.

Teck Resources delays Frontier oil sands project by five years - The Globe and Mail
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
118,620
14,561
113
Low Earth Orbit
How are the traditional sources doing?

Hmm
Despite headwinds, production from the oil sands is expected to climb by 800,000 barrels a day by 2020 as projects under construction come on stream, according to consultancy IHS Cera.

Those include Fort Hills, a $13.5-billion oil sands mine under construction about 90 kilometres north of Fort McMurray, Alta. The project, led by Suncor Energy Inc., is due to add 180,000 barrels a day of new capacity in northern Alberta starting in late 2017.