Wednesday, July 14, 2021

Copper mining is Opec on crack, so why is the price falling?

Frik Els | July 13, 2021 |

The Shah of Iran opens the facilities of International Naval Oil Company of Iran in 1970. File image.

Much like the reference in this piece’s headline, it’s a cliché to call a country the Saudia Arabia of something.


The top search suggestion at the moment is the Saudi Arabia of wind. That’s Boris Johnson’s dream for the UK and from a leader with an affinity for hot air, perhaps not unexpected.


The Saudi Arabia of lithium query takes you to a story about Chile, which is wrong. Neither is it Afghanistan as this article in the NYT would have it. It’s Nevada; Elon Musk confirmed it last year.

The Saudi Arabia of sashimi is… well just google it. (it’s Palau – ed.)

Chile is not the Saudi Arabia of copper either.


It’s the Saudia Arabia, Iraq, UAE, Iran, Kuwait, Nigeria, Angola, Algeria, Venezuela, Libya, Congo-Brazzaville, Gabon and Equatorial Guinea of copper.

Chile’s share of global copper output is on par with the combined output of the 13 members of Opec in the crude trade.

In 2020 the South American nation produced 5.7m tonnes of copper out of a global total of 20.2m tonnes, according to the US Geological Service. Opec countries were responsible for 24.3m of the 76.1 million barrels per day produced during March this year, according to the US Energy Information Administration.
Chile+

Chile and Peru together constitute close to 40% of world production, which is roughly the share of what is known as Opec+ (add Russia). And consider that Chile and especially Peru suffered frequent covid-related mining disruptions last year (not to mention blockades at some of the biggest mines and transport strikes).


The concentration at the top is only going to increase. The Democratic Republic of the Congo could as soon as next year overtake China as the no 3 producer when the Ivanhoe-Zijin JV, Kamoa-Kakula, adds 400,000ktpa to the country’s total (and doubling its contribution six years later).

Apart from Rio Tinto’s much-anticipated block cave at Oyu Tolgoi (330ktpa) in Mongolia on the Chinese border, the only near-production projects close to this size are in South America.


Anglo American’s greenfield Quellaveco project (300ktpa) in Peru and Teck Resources’ phase 2 at Quebrada Blanca (295ktpa) in northern Chile will further entrench the two countries’ dominance

Playing with monopsony money

As in other spheres, China plays the long game in mining.

It bagged the largest new copper mine to come on stream in decades – Las Bambas in Peru – by making its sale to a Chinese concern a requirement for approving the 2014 Glencore-Xstrata merger.

In 2016, China Moly picked up Tenke Fungurume in the biggest overseas splash since Las Bambas, paying $2.7 billion to take it off Freeport-McMoRan and Lundin’s hands.

In all, China has spent $16 billion on buying copper projects around the world and at the moment owns 30 operating copper mines and 38 exploration projects.

That’s over and above Beijing’s annual foreign direct investment in mining and exploration, which reached $2.2 billion in 2019.
Go downstream, things will be great when you’re downstream

It’s not only primary production that’s highly concentrated, there’s a lock on the midstream.

Overall, 63% of China’s copper concentrate comes from Chile and Peru, and after decades of investment in the sector, the country refines over 40% of the world’s copper, six times its nearest rival, Japan.

The Tenke deal supercharged the 4C supply chain – Congo-Copper-Cobalt-China – as Chinese imports of concentrate from central Africa and elsewhere accelerated towards 2020’s total of just under 22m tonnes per year.


THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION REPORTEDLY WANTS TO COPY THE CHINESE PLAYBOOK, BUT IN ORDER TO PLACATE ENVIRONMENTALISTS WILL SKIP THE MINING PART


Cobalt is a by-product of copper mining — primarily in the DRC which is responsible for some two-thirds of global output. China owns 82% of global midstream processing of cobalt for batteries. For nickel in the EV supply chain it’s 65%.

The Biden administration reportedly wants to copy the Chinese playbook, but in order to placate environmentalists will skip the mining part.

In the words of one official involved in critical minerals policy, “it’s not that hard to dig a hole. What’s hard is getting that stuff out and getting it to processing facilities.”

Just like all the oil processing facilities in the US shielded it from the Opec-induced oil supply shocks of the 1970s. Right?
Earthquake in Chile

While the Middle-East is a volatile region (to use a well-worn euphemism), its hereditary leaders and pseudo-democracies have a way of keeping the oil flowing regardless of any palace intrigue, proxy wars, or sanctions.



In contrast, Chile and Peru are in the early stage of fundamental political shifts driven by elections fought over income inequality, poverty and the environment – hardly on the political agenda in places like Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states.

A debate between Opec’s crown princes and emirs has sent oil to three-year highs, up 50% in 2021.

Let’s count the ways Chile can cause a copper market meltup:

It’s rewriting its Pinochet-era constitution, new copper windfall taxes and royalties already approved by the lower house, could, to put it mildly, dampen enthusiasm (your last euphemism – ed.) for new projects, so-called tax stability deals for half the country’s mines (including Escondida, the copper world’s Ghawar) expire in 2023 if they last that long, a powerful mining union is lobbying for state-owned Codelco to have dibs on projects, and if the current frontrunner becomes president in November elections he would be the first person from the Communist Party to do so.

Daniel Jadue also has other ideas to increase the state’s take and involvement – creating a Codelco for lithium (gentle reminder: Codelco was created by seizing mines from US companies in the 1970s) and like Indonesia renegotiate state shareholding in private companies like Freeport had to with Grasberg.

Another successful Indonesian strategy Chile and others would want to copy is to force miners to build smelters and refineries in-country by banning ore exports.

A bit like the current US administration’s clever strategy around critical minerals, focusing on processing facilities, except Chile also produces feedstock for said facilities.
Dear prudence

Now take all of the Chilean political and mining trends, turn them up a few notches, and apply to Peru and its new president Pedro Castillo.

At the start of his campaign, Castillo said he wanted to nationalize the mines but later softened his stance by calling for Chile-like royalties in the 70-percents.

This is a recent headline about Castillo’s latest plans for the industry:

Peru’s Castillo expects mining firms to accept “prudent” tax changes, adviser says

You can read that as having a conciliatory tone, or perhaps it sounds more like: “Nice little copper mine you have there. It would be a shame if something were to happen to it. We’ll make you an offer you can’t refuse.”


Ocec nocec


The copper-oil analogy only goes so far.

Captain Copper, Latin American superhero. Image: Codelco

While regional co-operation to align mining rules for Chile, Peru, Argentina, Bolivia and others so as to “not compete for investments” (Jadue again) is being discussed, an Opec-like cartel in copper is never going to happen.

Most Opec disagreements are about how much to up production (the UAE wants to pump more oil now because the assumption is as the world moves away from fossil fuels it would be stuck with stranded oil and gas assets down the line).

Codelco is spending more than $40 billion just to keep output steady. Opec-members output hikes can also hit oil markets within months. For copper it takes years, often decades to bring new supply online.

Low and declining grades and with it ever costlier and bigger mines, uninspiring green discoveries, modest brownfield expansions, thin project pipelines, underinvestment in exploration, and glacially slow permitting processes, have become rules of thumb in the industry. And when tailings reprocessing is being discussed as a significant source of new supply, you know something in the industry has changed.

Depletion is oddly little discussed (must be in miners’ DNA – it’s always about the next discovery, not this old hole in the ground – ed). A recent study found that most porphyries (which supply 80% of the world’s copper) are fast nearing the end of their productive life due to the specific nature of how these deposits are formed.

So why is the price falling? idk


The copper price is down 10% since hitting all-time highs of $10,500 a tonne ($4.75/lbs) in May and forecasts are for further declines.

Two years out among more than 30 investment banks, economists and research houses polled consensus is for an average $8,131 a tonne ($3.68/lb).

Technically, that means copper is entering a bear market.

But it’s worth remembering that the metal also traded at these levels as far back as 2011.

Rapid demand growth and rising risks to supply since then does not seem baked into today’s price, much less in continuing declines.
CHILE
BHP’s Cerro Colorado must start from scratch on environmental plan
Reuters | July 13, 2021 | 

Cerro Colorado is BHP’s smallest Chilean copper operation. (Image: Zwansaurio | Flickr Commons)

BHP’s Cerro Colorado copper mine must start again from scratch on an environmental plan for a key mine maintenance project, a Chilean court ruled on Tuesday, though the company said the decision would not impact operations.


The Antofagasta Environmental Tribunal annulled the 2019 approval for the project, which includes work on a low-grade mineral deposit, internal roads and camps, noting the regulator’s initial evaluation had been tainted by “substantial errors.”

The decision follows a ruling in January by the country’s Supreme Court that upheld local indigenous communities’ complaint that the process had failed to consider concerns about the project’s impacts on natural resources, including a regional aquifer.

BHP told Reuters the mine would continue to operate while the company reviewed the decision to its determine next steps.

“The ruling does not compromise the operational continuity of Cerro Colorado,” the company said.

The court said the initial environmental approvals had failed to “correctly evaluate” the risk of air pollution generated by the project, and expressed special concern for the failure to consult properly with the local communities near the project site.

Cerro Colorado, a small mine in BHP’s Chilean portfolio, produced about 1.2% of Chile’s total copper output in 2020. The country is the largest copper producer in the world.

(By Dave Sherwood; Editing by Dan Grebler)
Battery chain puts lithium’s green credentials under microscope

Bloomberg News | July 8, 2021 | 

Chile holds half of the world’s most “economically extractable” reserves of lithium. (Image: Orlando Neto | Shutterstock.)

A group backed by German car-making giants Daimler AG and Volkswagen AG has started a study into the environmental impact of lithium mining in Chile, the second-largest supplier of the key ingredient in rechargeable batteries.


GIZ, the German development agency running the initiative, is looking into how pumping up lithium-laced brine from beneath the Atacama salt flat is impacting local water supplies and communities. The project will last about two and a half years, a spokeswoman said.

It’s the latest effort by the global battery-supply chain to address growing concern among investors and the general public over the sustainability of industries that will produce the building blocks for the clean-energy transformation.

Albemarle Corp. and Soc. Quimica & Minera de Chile SA are ramping up output in the Atacama, which boasts the world’s largest reserves, in response to a projected tripling of global demand. That’s shining a light on the fragility of desert ecosystems once seen as resilient to the method of pumping up brine into massive evaporation pools.

The salt flat is in one of the driest places on Earth, where copper mines, communities and tourism also compete for water.

“There is a lack of consensus regarding the impacts and risks of lithium mining and other economic activity in the region,” the GIZ spokeswoman said.

The initial phase of the Responsible Lithium Partnership initiative is being funded by Daimler, Volkswagen, BASF SE and Fairphone BV. It will seek input from parties such as copper and lithium producers, indigenous communities and authorities. SQM welcomed the initiative, saying it was aligned with its sustainability vision. Both SQM and Albemarle are working to minimize brine and water use.

The partnership may lack teeth and looks like an attempt to boost supply-chain perceptions from a German auto industry that’s facing its own environmental, social and governance issues, said Alonso Barros, a lawyer who works with communities surrounding Chilean lithium operations.

The study is getting underway at a time of heightened scrutiny for mining companies in Chile, where a new constitution is being drafted that could lead to stricter environmental standards.


(By Daniela Sirtori-Cortina and James Attwood)
ArcelorMittal to build first big zero-carbon steel plant

Bloomberg News | July 13, 2021 |

Aditya Mittal – Image courtesy of ArcelorMittal

ArcelorMittal SA has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Spanish government for a 1 billion euro ($1.2 billion) investment to build the world’s first large-scale zero-carbon steel plant.


The company would build a unit that processes iron ore using green hydrogen at its plant in Gijon, a spokesperson for the firm said in a statement today. That metal would then supply a mill in Sestao that would use renewable electricity to produce 1.6 million tonnes of carbon-free steel a year.


It would be the biggest green steel plant coming online by 2025 globally, and represents a significant step for an industry facing a titanic decarbonizing task.


Steelmaking relies on burning billions of tons of coal, emitting more carbon dioxide each year than cars, buses and motorbikes combined. Upgrading to zero-carbon production will require massive investment, something the usually low margin business may struggle to afford.

“This is a project that will require the support of many different partners to succeed,” said Aditya Mittal, chief executive officer of ArcelorMittal. “Our plan hinges on the supply of affordable, mass-scale hydrogen, access to sustainable finance and a supportive legal framework that allows us to be competitive globally.”


It’s not certain how much cash Spain will contribute. In the statement, ArcelorMittal said it expects support provided to be “at least half of the additional cost to enable its operations to remain competitive.” The company did not specify if it needed the aid as a grant or loan.

Spanish Industry Minister Maria Reyes Maroto said the government was exploring regulatory instruments to support industry in decarbonizing, including “compensation programs for electricity-intensive industries” and “instruments to promote industrial investments.”

It’s also contingent on competitively priced green hydrogen being available in Spain by 2025. The country has made the renewable produced gas a key part of its plans to invest funds borrowed as part of the European Union’s coronavirus recovery package.

The EU will unveil a series of measures this week to enable it to meet its ambitious 2030 climate plan, which will see the bloc bid to lower emissions by 55% from their 1990 levels.

ArcelorMittal also plans to add an electric arc furnace at its Gijon plant, replacing one of the blast furnaces there.

(By Eddie Spence)
Taseko sells Harmony gold project in British Columbia
Northern Miner Staff | July 12, 2021 

Haida Gwaii – Graham Island. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Taseko Mines (TSX: TKO; NYSE: TGV; LSE: TKO) has sold its Harmony gold exploration project on Graham Island, Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, to JDA Gold, a newly incorporated company controlled by JDS Energy and Mining. Taseko will retain a 15% carried interest in JDS Gold and a 2% net smelter return royalty.


Taseko purchased the Harmony project in 2001 and advanced engineering work for it until 2008. The project has a historical resource (not NI 43-101 compliant) of 22 million tonnes at 1.77 grams gold per tonne and 42 million tonnes at 1.41 grams gold using a 0.60 gram gold per tonne cut-off grade. In total there are an estimated 3 million oz. of gold in the historic resource.

With Taseko focusing its energy on construction and permitting the Florence copper project in Arizona, the company said it is not in a position to advance Harmony for several years.

“JDS Energy and Mining has a proven track record of developing mineral projects, and this transaction structure allows Taseko to participate in their success and create value from this asset in the near-term,” said president and CEO Stuart McDonald in a news release.

“With our engineering, permitting and mine construction expertise, we believe we can advance this project and create significant value for all stakeholders,” added JDS CEO Jeff Stibbard.

(This article first appeared in The Northern Miner)
Vale has decommissioned Fernandinho dam
Reuters | July 13, 2021 |

Tailings’ filtration plant at Vargem Grande complex, delivered in March 2021.
(Image courtesy of Vale’s Q1 2021 Financial Report.)

Vale SA on Tuesday that it had finished decomissioning the Fernandinho dam, located in the Abóboras mine in the Vargem Grande complex, although it added that the work still needed to be approved by regulators.


Vale said the work is part of a program to decomission dams that used similar structures to the one in Brumadinho, a dam that burst in 2019 and killed over 200.
Bigger than Voisey’s: Canada Nickel files PEA for Crawford mine in Ontario

Cecilia Jamasmie | July 12, 2021 

Crawford nickel-cobalt project in Ontario. Image from Canada Nickel Company.

Canada Nickel Company (TSX-V: CNC) announced on Monday it had filed a preliminary economic assessment (PEA) for the Crawford nickel sulphide project in Ontario, almost a year after exploration drilling began at the asset.


The PEA envisions a conventional open pit mine and mill that will produce both nickel and magnetite concentrates over a mine life of 25 years. The operation is set to generate 2.05 tonnes of carbon dioxide per tonne of nickel-equivalent production in the period — 93% lower than the industry average of 29 tonnes of CO2.

The study includes a downstream processing concept, which sees a third party building a stainless steel plant, likely in Timmins, which would be fed by Crawford’s high-grade product.

Over the 25-year mine life Crawford is expected to produce 842,000 tonnes of nickel, 21 million tonnes of iron and 1.5 million tonnes of chrome valued at C$24 billion ($19bn) using long-term price assumptions. Annual average nickel production of 75 million pounds (34,000 tonnes) with peak period annual average of 93 million pounds (42,000 tonnes), with significant iron and chrome by-products of 860,000 tonnes per annum and 59,000 tonnes per annum, respectively.

THE NICKEL MINE IS SET TO GENERATE 93% FEWER EMISSIONS THAN THE INDUSTRY AVERAGE OF 29 TONNES DURING ITS 25-YEAR MINE LIFE

“We’re talking district-scale potential that would make this the largest base metal mine in Canada once it’s ramped up,” chairman and chief executive Mark Selby said in a May interview. “We’d be the largest single nickel sulphide mine in the world outside Russia. We’ll be bigger than [Vale’s] Voisey’s Bay. This is a pretty significant project.”


Canada Nickel already has a deal with Glencore (LON: GLEN) to potentially use the miner and commodities trader’s Kidd concentrator and metallurgical site in Timmins.

Crawford will be powered by zero-carbon electricity and use trolley trucks and electric rope shovels as part of the company’s efforts to minimize its carbon footprint through reduced diesel consumption.

Being a zero-emissions nickel producer would potentially put the company on Tesla’s radar. The co-founder and CEO of the electric vehicles maker, Elon Musk, offered last year a “giant contract for a long period of time” to any firm able to extract the battery metal in an efficient, environmentally sustainable manner.

Analysts and industry actors alike expect the market for battery-grade nickel to be in a tight balance in the next two to three years as demand from lithium-ion battery producers picks up.

NONE NUCLEAR POWER OPERATED

News

Iran plans to build 13 power plants in next three years

12 July 2021 | By GCR Staff | 

Iran plans to sign a memorandum of understanding this week for the construction of 13 power plants across the country, according to deputy minister for energy, Saeed Zarandi.

The country has suffered a number of blackouts in recent weeks, which the government has blamed on high demand and a severe drought. President Rouhani promised that the government would seek to resolve the problems within the next two or three weeks.

Zarandi said yesterday that the ministry, on behalf of Iranian industries, had been in talks with Tavanir, the country’s electricity utility, over the programme. He added that the plants would be financed by 12 investors from different sectors and would be constructed within three years.

Altogether, they will add 10.5GW to Iran’s installed capacity, an increase of around 13%.

The plants will be located in Isfahan, Hormozgan, Markazi, Yazd, Kerman, Fars, Semnan and Khuzestan provinces.

The aim of the plants is to provide electricity to high-demand industries such as mining, thereby reducing the load on the national grid.

The minister did not say what kind of power plants would be built, or what the estimated cost would be.

At present, 69% of Iran’s electricity is generated by natural gas, 25% by oil and 6% by hydropower. Solar and wind are negligible at present, although the government is aiming to generate 7.5GW from those sectors by 2030.

Image: The Shazand oil-fired power plant in Arak, western Iran (Mohsan Dabiri-e Vaziri/CC BY-SA 2.5)

Further reading:

Nearly half of oil and gas emissions could be cut without spending a penny


BY IRINA IVANOVA
JULY 9, 2021  / MONEYWATCH

As the world's economy rebounds from the COVID-19 pandemic, demand for oil and gas is set to increase — and so is the emission of methane, a potent greenhouse gas with 80 times the heat-trapping power of carbon dioxide. The fossil fuel industry is one of the biggest sources of human-generated methane emissions, emitting 70 metric tons of the polluting gas last year — roughly equivalent to all the carbon dioxide produced by the European Union.

Now for the good news: About 40% of methane emissions from oil and gas production can be eliminated without costing a cent, the U.S. Energy Information Agency said in a recent report. Cutting down that number "is among the most cost-effective and impactful actions that governments can take to achieve global climate goals," according to the agency.

Plug the leaks

Natural gas is produced by drilling or hydraulic fracturing (better known as fracking), and is also extracted as a byproduct of drilling for oil. Because the gas is invisible and odorless, detecting leaks can be challenging. And leaks can occur at any point in the process, from extraction out of the ground to the moment where the gas is burned in a power plant.

Among the most cost-effective steps natural gas producers can take is replacing old equipment, the EIA notes. Many pumps, valves and compressors on a gas-drilling pad emit methane in the course of their operations, and tend to emit more as they age — especially if they aren't maintained. The EIA recommends replacing many components early and replacing gas-powered parts with electrified versions, which leak less gas in their operations.

Detecting leaks early and often, through technology such as infrared cameras or satellite imaging, can also help plug up leaks. The EIA also recommends eliminating the practice of venting, or releasing natural gas straight into the atmosphere, in order to empty a pipe for maintenance or when extraction companies are getting rid of unwanted natural gas to collect oil.

"Natural gas is essentially just methane, and in many cases if you can avoid that methane leak, you can sell that gas for profit," Christophe McGlade, the head of IEA's Energy Supply Unit, told CBS MoneyWatch.

"Big part of global warming"

These recovery steps all result in gas producers having more product to sell, so they tend to be more valuable for the industry when the cost of gas is high. In the U.S., gas prices have been low for years, thanks to the fracking boom, and is one reason why U.S. oil and gas producers have been loath to crack down on methane leaks.

"You have, I wouldn't say an oversupply of gas, but you're very flush with gas. So the financial numbers for reducing [leaks] with no external pressure are actually quite low," said Dan Zimmerle, a senior research associate at the Energy Institute of Colorado State University.

Recent research has shown that oil and gas extraction emits much more methane gas than previously believed. Satellite imaging last year revealed that the Permian Basin in West Texas was leaking enough methane every year to power 7 million households. Some 3.7% of the gas extracted from the area was lost as emissions, a study from the Environmental Defense Fund found.

That figure matters because the leakage rate of methane is directly tied to its role as an ostensibly low-emissions fuel. If just 1% of captured gas escapes, "there's no doubt that it's better than coal; there's no doubt that it's better than just about any fossil fuel source there is," said Zimmerle.

At a leakage rate of 2% or 2.5%, however, burning natural gas has the same climate impact as burning coal. Research by other scientists, including Robert Howarth, a professor of ecology and environmental biology at Cornell University, shows that the oil and gas industry's leakage rate may be even higher — approaching 4%.

Concentrations of methane in the Earth's atmosphere have increased steadily since about 2010, after staying flat for the first decade of this century.

"My research suggests that most of that is coming from the oil and gas industry, and it's responsible for a big part of global warming," Howarth said.

Congress recently moved to crack down on greenhouse gas emissions from extraction sites, opening the door for the Environmental Protection Agency to craft tighter rules for the industry.

To date, human-caused greenhouse gas emissions have warmed the planet by about 1.1 degrees Celsius, research shows. About a quarter of that warming is attributed to methane, Howarth said.

Methane stays in the atmosphere for a shorter period of time than carbon dioxide, dissipating after several decades, while CO2 stays in the atmosphere for centuries. But methane can trap 80 times the heat of carbon dioxide during its lifespan, making it much more damaging to the climate short-term.

"We should be doing anything we can to trim the rate of warming," Howarth said. "We can do a lot of damage in the next few years. You actually run the risk of irreversible, catastrophic warming."

First published on July 8, 2021 / 9:46 AM

© 2021 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
SAVE MY ASS SAYS KENNEY

Varcoe: Kenney 'urges' oil
producers to turn profits into more spending and jobs

Energy prices have taken off this summer, but after the intense cost-cutting of last year it’s going to take time for companies to shift gears

Author of the article: Chris Varcoe • Calgary Herald
Publishing date: Jul 13, 2021 • 
A worker walks past a Caterpillar 797 heavy hauler at a Syncrude machine shop north of Fort McMurray on Aug. 15, 2017. 
PHOTO BY VINCENT MCDERMOTT/FORT MCMURRAY TODAY/POSTMEDIA


How does the Alberta government get the oilpatch to spend more money?


As the Canadian oil and gas sector accelerates into the second half of the year with revenues taking off, one of the biggest conundrums facing the UCP government is how to coax the industry to open up its collective pocketbook and create more jobs.

Premier Jason Kenney and Energy Minister Sonya Savage will be sitting down with oil and gas company leaders later this week to talk about it. The premier anticipates spending levels will soon rise.

“We do expect them to (spend more). Look, I understand they’ve had to repair damaged balance sheets from last year’s price collapse and the last five tough years,” Kenney said in an interview.

“But we believe many of the strongest companies have paid down debt, bought back shares, improved dividends and are now massively undervalued in the equity markets.

“But they now have cash on hand, many of them very large reserves of cash on hand, and we urge them to translate a lot of that cash into new capital investment.”

The meetings take place later this week at McDougall Centre and include CEOs from both oilsands and conventional petroleum producers.

After a disastrous 2020, the sector is on the mend as Western Canadian Select heavy oil prices and Alberta natural gas prices have taken off this summer. On Monday, benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude closed at US$74.10 a barrel.

Analysis from ARC Energy Research Institute projects Canadian oil and gas industry revenues will rise by more than 85 per cent this year.


While cash flow levels are forecast to hit a record $74.6 billion, the industry is only expected to reinvest about 40 per cent of the money, by far the lowest level seen in the past decade.

Companies are still under pressure from investors to remain financially disciplined and keep costs down.

Producers are paying down debt and returning cash to shareholders through dividends and share buybacks, although some modest spending increases are planned.


The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers projects total capital expenditures (also known as cap-ex) will increase by 13 per cent to $27 billion this year from 2020 levels. However, it’s well off the $35 billion spent in 2019 before the pandemic struck.

“By and large, the companies haven’t announced any really substantive increases to cap-ex and they might not do so until their 2022 budgets,” said CAPP vice-president Ben Brunnen.

Higher capital spending by producers drives employment in the sector, including throughout the oilfield services industry, which is beginning to see more demand from customers and is starting to hire
.
Trucks loaded with oilsands drive through the Suncor Energy Inc. mine near Fort McMurray in 2015. PHOTO BY BEN NELMS/BLOOMBERG

“Urging companies to invest, it’s helpful to encourage investment, but we need more than that,” added Brunnen.

“We need to look at the conditions for creating a good investment climate … but also the right commitment on addressing ESG.”

At the premier’s annual Stampede breakfast on Monday, Savage said the government has done what it can on the regulatory and fiscal front to improve the industry’s competitiveness by lowering taxes, cutting red tape and reforming the Alberta Energy Regulator.

She expects that as companies review their fall budgets, “we are going to see a big uptick in capital spending, which then leads to jobs.”

Yet, after the intense cost-cutting of last year as oil prices cratered, it’s going to take time for companies to shift gears.

“We are having numerous roundtables with the industry this week to talk about what the state of spending is, where they’re going, because our hope and our expectations is this is Alberta’s resource. The oil belongs to Albertans. We need the jobs here,” Savage said.

“We are going to see a lot of cash flow. And I think we just have to have that conversation: What are you going to do with it?”

The province continues to face political pressure on the employment front. Last week’s jobs report was largely flat, showing a loss of full-time jobs and a gain in part-time work in June.

The unemployment rate jumped to 9.3 per cent from 8.7 per cent as more people started to look for work. The province is still down almost 48,000 jobs since the pandemic began.

A report last week from CIBC Capital Markets forecast Alberta’s economy will expand by 7.9 per cent this year and 5.9 per cent in 2022, tops in the country, after suffering the largest contraction in Canada last year.


It also projects the jobless rate will average 8.5 per cent this year, almost a full point about the national average.


NDP MLA Shannon Phillips said the UCP’s decision to cut corporate income taxes in Alberta has failed.


“What Albertans are looking for in their economic recovery is jobs above all else,” Phillips said.

“That corporate tax cut has simply gone to share buybacks and other initiatives and has not remained here in Alberta to create jobs.”


Kenney told reporters Monday he was a bit surprised to see the lacklustre employment report as the provincial economy started to reopen in June, but predicted “huge job growth” later in the year.


 
UCP Leader Jason Kenney during a campaign stop in Turner Valley on April 2, 2019.
PHOTO BY AL CHAREST/POSTMEDIA

In the energy sector, there is a “reticence to deploy growth capital,” although strong commodity prices could strengthen calls for increased exploration and development spending in the second half of the year as second-quarter results roll in, said a recent note by Stifel FirstEnergy.

Petroleum producers note there are still many uncertainties ahead, including volatile commodity markets, concerns about future energy demand, the need for ESG-related investments and ongoing pipeline challenges.

“I just don’t see the Western Canadian basin growing when you have all the constraints there,” said Tamarack Valley Energy CEO Brian Schmidt.

“We are meeting with the premier … so I’m really interested to see where he is coming from. I think we need to talk about the systematic problems we have in Canada.”

Chris Varcoe is a Calgary Herald columnist.