Archives

Home   >   Archives   

Shale Drillers in Canada Feeling the Permian Pain

Rig Lynx
  • By Rig Lynx
  • Sep 21, 2018
  • Category : Archives
  • Views : 457

The Permian Basin isn’t the only oil field facing pressure from pipeline bottlenecks.

While global oil prices have climbed almost 20 percent this year, producers in Alberta and British Columbia’s shale formations are seeing just the opposite, stymied by a lack of sufficient infrastructure to bring their light oil to market.

As Canada pushes for more pipelines to move its oil-sands output, two existing conduits that ship from shale are so full that space is being rationed. That leaves producers like Encana Corp., and Seven Generations Energy Ltd. facing regional oil prices at the lowest level in more than four years. This comes after rising oil prices earlier this year encouraged them to ramp up production, leading to a surge of condensate and oil.

“Individually, if the prices are there, the incentive is to drill,” Kevin Birn, a director on the North American crude oil markets team at IHS Markit, said in a phone interview. “But the collective impact appears to be that they may have overrun the market.”

Until recently, Canada’s shale drillers had largely escaped the oil-sands pipeline bottlenecks that sent heavy crudes to the weakest level since 2013.

A silver lining is that the low cost for condensate, one of the types of light oil produced in Canada’s shale, is providing some benefit to oil sands producers like Suncor Energy Inc. and Cenovus Energy Inc., who use it as a diluent to move heavy oil sands crude out of the region. Condensate can make up about a third of every barrel of bitumen crude that’s shipped out via pipeline or rail.

A new community just for oil and gas…

Download the app free right here!

“It’s a meaningful impact on their cashflows, but they are still dealing with the wide differentials,” Mark Oberstoetter, lead analyst for upstream research at Wood Mackenzie Ltd. in Calgary, said by phone. “That helps a little bit.”

So far, drillers see the lower prices as temporary, Tom Whalen, Chief Executive Officer of the trade group Petroleum Services Association of Canada, said in a phone interview.

Last year, Chevron Corp., which owns the most drilling rights in the area, announced plans to develop about 55,000 acres (22,000 hectares) of land in the Duvernay. The company is continuing with those plans and has two rigs operating in the area, spokeswoman Veronica Flores-Paniagua said in an email Monday.

“No decisions have been taken on future development of other areas within Chevron’s lease holdings,” she said

The oil sands have made Western Canada a half-million barrel a day market for the condensate needed to dilute bitumen, Birn said. But imports from the U.S. surged to the highest in two years in June, according to U.S. Energy Department data.

The idea that domestic production might suddenly “overtake” imports wasn’t “on the radar” in the past, Birn said. “If it’s a battle for market share, its going to come down to U.S. imports being pulled back.”

Because crude futures are trading around $70 a barrel, Canadian light oil drillers are still making money even with the wide discount, Wood Mackenzie’s Oberstoetter said.

“The stuff that’s getting drilled today is still in the money but you are a bit disgruntled,” he said. “You see other players in other parts of the world getting more.”

Original Article Here


Check out our other current stories, we dare you…

Comments (0)

Leave Comment


Check out our other stories

Rig Lynx
Mar 09, 2023

  Valaris Limited announced new contracts awarded subsequent to issuing the Company’s most recent fleet status report on February 21, 2023.   Three-year contract with Petrobras for drillship VALARIS DS-8. The rig will be reactivated for this contract. The total contract value is approximately $500 million, including a $30 million mobilization fee. 100-day contract with a TotalEnergies affiliate for drillship VALARIS DS-12. The contract is expected to commence in second quarter 2023. 70-day contract with Beach Energy offshore New Zealand for heavy duty modern jackup VALARIS 107. The contract is expected to commence in third quarter 2023. The total contract value is approximately $26 million. President and Chief Executive Officer Anton Dibowitz said, “We are particularly pleased to have secured the award for preservation stacked drillship VALARIS DS-8, for a contract that is expected to generate a meaningful return over the firm contract term, and we remain focused on exercising our operational leverage in a disciplined manner. This most recent award represents the sixth contract awarded to one of our high-quality stacked floaters since mid-2021, and speaks volumes about our demonstrated track record of project execution when reactivating rigs.”   Dibowitz added, “Following the reactivation of VALARIS DS-17 and DS-8, we will have ten floaters working across the golden triangle, including four drillships in Brazil, a market where we expect to see continued growth over the next several years.”   Updated Guidance   As a result of the contract awarded to VALARIS DS-8, which will require the rig to be reactivated from preservation stack, we are updating our first quarter 2023 and full-year 2023 guidance provided on our fourth quarter 2022 conference call on February 21, 2023.   First Quarter 2023   Contract drilling expense is expected to increase by approximately $5 million to $385 million to $395 million. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to decrease by approximately $5 million to negative $5 million to breakeven. Adjusted EBITDAR, which adds back one-time reactivation expense, is expected to be $25 million to $30 million, unchanged from the guidance provided on our fourth quarter 2022 conference call. Full-Year 2023   Revenues are anticipated to be $1.8 billion to $1.9 billion, unchanged from the guidance provided on our fourth quarter 2022 conference call. Contract drilling expense is expected to increase by approximately $60 million to $1.49 billion to $1.59 billion. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to decrease by approximately $60 million to $180 million to $220 million. Adjusted EBITDAR, which adds back one-time reactivation expense, is expected to be $280 million to $320 million, unchanged from the guidance provided on our fourth quarter 2022 conference call. Capital expenditures are expected to increase by $60 million to $320 million to $360 million. Source: Valaris Join our mailing list here We are #1 on Google and Bing for the "Largest Mobile Energy Network" Come join our community! Download the Rig Lynx app here  

Rig Lynx
Mar 09, 2023

  Seadrill Limited announced that the West Neptune has executed approximately six months of term extensions with LLOG Exploration Offshore, L.L.C in the US Gulf of Mexico.   The extensions will commence in direct continuation of the existing term, and will keep the rig busy until Q3 2024, furthering Seadrill and LLOG’s long-term association. Total contract value for the extension is approximately $79 million. Source: Seadrill   Join our mailing list here We are #1 on Google and Bing for the "Largest Mobile Energy Network" Come join our community! Download the Rig Lynx app here  

Rig Lynx
Mar 09, 2023

  Semisub rig owner Dolphin Drilling has inked a new contract with Peak Petroleum in Nigeria for its 1974-built Blackford Dolphin.   The firm contract, which follows the letter of award in January, gives the Euronext Growth-listed owner of three rigs the potential to extend the unit’s backlog by a minimum of 120 days and up to 485 days. The deal adds to and will be a direct continuation of the previously announced 12-month contract with General Hydrocarbon Limited (GHL).   Øystein Stray Spetalen-backed company said the effective dayrate associated with the minimum firm period of the contract is $325,000, including the mobilisation fee.   “The final award of the contract for Blackford Dolphin shows the opportunities in Nigeria at a strong dayrate, in addition to building on the backlog for the rig. It also underlines the attractiveness of our assets, and we look forward to returning to revenue-generating operations in 2023,” noted Bjørnar Iversen, CEO of Dolphin Drilling.   Source: Dolphin   Join our mailing list here We are #1 on Google and Bing for the "Largest Mobile Energy Network" Come join our community! Download the Rig Lynx app here