The last few months have been marked by some massive shifts in theย oilsands.
In December, there was the $830 million Statoil sale to Athabasca Oil, followed in January and February by the writing down of billions of barrels of reserves by Imperial Oil, ConocoPhillips andย ExxonMobil.
On March 9, Shell sold a majority of its oilsands assets to Canadian Natural Resources Limited (CNRL) in a huge $7.25 billion sale, while Marathon Oil split its Canadian subsidiary between Shell and CNRL for a total of $2.5ย billion.
The question is: why are all of these companies selling their oilsands assets? While some celebrate the moves as successes for the climate movement, others blame the Alberta NDP for the exodus ofย internationals.
But experts say the reality has more to do with a broader economic shift thatโs made oilsands uneconomical โย for the time being atย least.
โThe reason that Shell, Total and Statoil are pulling out, and the reason that Exxon has had to write down much of its Kearl Lake reserves, isnโt because of the emissions profile of the oilsands bitumen,โ Jeff Rubin, senior fellow of Centre for International Governance Innovation, told DeSmog Canada. โItโs rather because it doesnโt make any economic sense, before we even look at emissionsย pricing.โ
Canadian Companies Have โBullish Long-Run Viewโ onย Oilsands
Global oil prices have been extremely low for years. West Texas Intermediate is selling under $50/barrel. Meanwhile, Western Canadian Select โ the benchmark for Albertaโs heavy oil โ is currently priced at $35/barrel, about half of whatโs required to build new โgreenfieldโย production.
Such prices certainly are largely the result of the U.S. being flooded with oil thanks to the โshale revolutionโ thatโs taken place in North Dakotaโs Bakken Formation and Texasโ Permian Basin and Eagle Ford Group in recentย years.
Of course, no company with oilsands assets likes the situation or prices. But some โ especially those that have long specialized in heavy oil production, such as Suncor and Cenovus โ have more of what energy economist Andrew Leach describes as a โbullish long-run view on oilsandsโ compared to internationalย companies.
He says that their buying up of other companies and projects means they see some compatibility with existing assets, allowing for reduced costs in the long run by combining operations and maximizing economies ofย scale.
In addition, itโs far cheaper to acquire existing projects in the current market context than building new projects; Rubin says the likes of CNRL would argue the economics of oilsands projects span decades and that business-as-usual growth will eventually bring them online, even if they donโt look particularly viable at theย moment.
โIf you look at it from the buyersโ perspective, these are companies that see more value in the assets than the sellers do. Itโs basic sales dynamics,โ Leach, who teaches at the University of Alberta and chaired Albertaโs climate advisory team, told DeSmogย Canada.ย
Shale Oil Increasing in Prominence for Internationalย Companies
After all, the oilsands still has the capacity to produce more than two million barrels per day of oil, even if production doesnโt grow in the next fewย years.
ARC Financialโs Peter Tertzakian recently told a Vancouver audience that the oilsands are โgoing to supply three per cent of the worldโs oil needs over the next many decades, but thatโs not where the growth is.โ He emphasized the potential of the Montney Formation in northeast B.C. and northwestย Alberta.
Mark Oberstoetter, lead analyst at the consultancy firm Wood Mackenzie, told DeSmog Canada in an interview: โItโs not so much that companies are exiting the oilsands, itโs the Canadians looking to take an opportunistic strategy on low oil prices and acquiring some pretty rare assets that you couldnโt normally get in normal times. You could almost say its aggressiveness from theย Canadians.โ
Take Shell for example. The Dutch company has played an increasingly prominent role in the oilsands in recent years, including publicly backing Albertaโs climate plan, constructing the Scotford upgrader and building the Quest carbon capture and storage (CCS)ย project.
But Oberstoetter says that Shell is now focusing on assets such as integrated gas, liquified natural gas, pre-salt Brazil, Gulf of Mexico deepwater and Permian tight oil assets. Itโs about โshifting their portfolio down the cost curve into the assets theyโre goodย at.โ
And the oilsands just donโt make the cut forย them.
โTight oil has increased in importance for a lot of these companies,โ Oberstoetter says. โTheyโre just refocusing their portfolios, at the end of the day. I donโt think they would have made these exits if they didnโt get a price that was attractive toย them.โ
What The #Oilsands Sell-Off Actually Means https://t.co/rsqhzHD6Xm @james_m_wilt #cdnpoli #ableg #bcpoli #ClimateChange #FossilFuels pic.twitter.com/nW1xLFnG3d
โ DeSmog Canada (@DeSmogCanada) March 22, 2017
Some Companies Reference โDecarbonizationโ While Still Focusing on Fossilย Fuels
To be fair, some such companies have predicted โpeak oil demandโ arriving earlier than other major companies, as well as received what Leach calls โsignificant shareholder pressure relating to their oilsandsย holdings.โ
โThe interesting thing is if you look at Shell, Statoil and Total, who have all exited the tarsands, theyโre the three companies that are saying, โwe think a peak in oil demand is going to come in the next 10 to 15 years,โ โ says Keith Stewart, climate and energy campaigner at Greenpeace Canada. โItโs the Exxons of the world who are saying โoil demand will continue to grow for at least another 40 yearsโ who are doubling down on theย oilsands.โ
Recently, Shell announced it was tying executive packages to decarbonization. Leach notes the company has long had lower greenhouse gas emissions as a corporate priority, and has specifically carved out oilsands emissions in its annual sustainabilityย report.
In addition, the companyโs scrapping of the 80,000 bpd Carmon Creek project in October 2015 was reportedly tied to concerns about pipeline access, a problem arguably tied to activism by environmental groups. But itโs not like Shell is divesting from fossil fuels anytimeย soon.
While it has announced plans to increase annual spending on renewables up to $1 billion, thereโs another $25 billion or so that will go to other non-renewable investments. Same goes for Statoil: while it operates in Norway, a country thatโs had carbon pricing since 1991, and has indicated a desire to increase investments in renewables up to 20 per cent by 2030, the companyโs speciality is still very much in offshore and deepwater oilย extraction.
Writing Down Reserves Merely Reflects Last Yearโsย Prices
The writing down of reserves in filings to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) simply indicates that oil prices were especially low, and that they wouldnโt be commercially viable if oil markets continue to look like they did on average lastย year.
If prices rebound, those reserves can and very likely will be addedย back.
Whatโs effectively happened over the last few months is the rearranging of corporate portfolios to get costs down and maximize strategic focuses, combined with some obligatory filings under SECย formulas.
Millions of barrels per day will continue to be pumped from Albertaโs oilsands. It will just be by differentย companies.
Photo: Syncrude Canada via Flickr
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