Thursday, November 30, 2023

NFLD/LAB

Suncor restarts production at Terra Nova after work to extend life of project

Suncor Energy Inc. says it has restarted production at its Terra Nova production, storage and off-loading vessel.

The company says the restart comes after finishing work to extend the life of the project.

Production is expected to ramp up over the coming months.

Suncor chief executive Rich Kruger says the project will provide additional cash flow for shareholders as well as benefits to the Newfoundland and Labrador and Canadian economies.

Terra Nova is an oilfield located offshore Newfoundland and Labrador about 350 kilometres southeast of St. John's.

Suncor holds a 48 per cent stake in the project, while Cenovus Energy Inc. owns a 34 per cent stake and Murphy Oil Corp. holds 18 per cent.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 27, 2023.

Canada poised to become nuclear leader as COP28 discusses growth: BCC expert

As world leaders discuss the possibility of a major expansion in nuclear power, at least one expert suggests Canada’s rich uranium reserves could make the country a world leader in the space.

The United Nations Climate Change Conference, commonly referred to as COP28, includes discussions surrounding nuclear power for the first time, and world leaders are expected to reach an agreement on future expansion of the power source, according to The Associated Press.

Heather Exner-Pirot, special advisor of economic transition at the Business Council of Canada, said Canada should be excited about the prospects of such a deal, even if the country isn’t among the nations expected to be involved.

“So far there’s no indication that Canada is going to sign on to this declaration to want to triple nuclear energy, so for the nuclear sector that’s certainly a concern,” she told BNN Bloomberg in a television interview on Thursday.

Canada is the second largest producer of uranium in the world behind Kazakhstan, according to Natural Resources Canada, while Canada produces six per cent of the world’s nuclear power. 

“We have a lot of competitive advantages that people might not think,” Exner-Pirot said.

“Now is the time to capitalize and we’re seeing this emerging nuclear renaissance.”

For Exner-Pirot, Canada’s large uranium reserves offer another advantage in the energy transition: no need to rely on other nations.

“(Canada’s) not dependent on China for the critical minerals or the components, in fact the nuclear supply chain in Canada is over 90 per cent domestic and just about 100 per cent North American,” she said.

With files from The Associated Press

Canadian oil and gas execs look to talk up emissions reduction plans at COP28 summit

Executives and senior leaders from Canada's oil and gas sector are heading to Dubai for the upcoming United Nations COP28 climate talks, eager to tell the world they are doing what they can to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The fossil fuel industry will have a position of prominence at this year's climate summit, which begins Thursday. 

Hosted by the United Arab Emirates — which pumps about three million barrels of petroleum products each day — and chaired by Sultan al Jaber, an Emirati who is also CEO of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, the 2023 COP event will put oil companies in the spotlight even as it seeks to find ways to hold the line on global warming.

Among the Canadian oil and gas sector representatives headed to the summit are a contingent from the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP) industry group and a team from the Pathways Alliance consortium of oilsands companies.

CAPP president Lisa Baiton said in an email the group is going to "contribute to the dialogue" on global decarbonization efforts, while Pathways Alliance president Kendall Dilling said his organization wants to collaborate with other industries around the world who face similar challenges when it comes to emissions.

"We're going there in a very constructive way to say, ‘We’re here, we’re a big source of emissions and we’re going to be a big part of the solution,'" Dilling said in an interview.

“I think we have something to offer, frankly ...  we're an entire sector that’s come together jointly to tackle this problem."

As the world's fourth largest oil producer and this country's heaviest-emitting sector, Canada's oil and gas industry is under increasing pressure to decarbonize to help this country meet its international climate commitments. 

The federal government wants to see Canada's oilpatch reduce its emissions by 31 per cent below 2005 levels, or 42 per cent below 2019 levels, to 110 million tonnes by 2030.  

The government has promised to impose an emissions cap on the sector, something environmentalists say is necessary but is widely reviled by industry and viewed as akin to a production cap.

But even in the absence of domestic pressures, Canadian oil and gas companies have a business incentive to cut emissions. 

Many analysts believe Canadian oil and gas companies are facing a future scenario in which only the cheapest and lowest-emission producers will remain competitive long-term as the energy transition accelerates.

"Certainly, the world is seeking to lower emissions, full stop, and at the same time, we're seeing demand for fossil fuels continue. So decarbonization has become a metric of competitiveness," said Kevin Birn, vice-president and Canadian oil markets chief analyst with S&P Global.

"I think that's the reason you see increasing participation (at COP) as they attempt to understand these latest developments and adapt to the market signals that are coming," he said.

Within the last 18 months, the Canadian oil and gas sector has rolled out a flurry of announcements of proposed projects — from hydrogen plants to renewable diesel facilities to carbon capture and storage — aimed at lowering the industry’s emissions profile.

The Pathways Alliance, which says it has spent $1.8 billion since 2021 on decarbonization efforts, says it's eager to talk about some of its emissions reduction plans — including a proposal to spend $16.5 billion to build a massive carbon capture and storage network in northern Alberta.

"We know that it’s critical to the future of our business and to the sustainability of our sector," Dilling said, adding that international climate targets will never be met if heavy emitters aren't at the table for events like COP28.

"Whatever targets are ultimately landed on, it’s industry writ large who have to execute on those emission reduction targets."

Janetta McKenzie, a senior analyst with clean energy think-tank the Pembina Institute, said oil and gas participation in the UN climate summit is a positive thing.

"Their presence at COP does indicate that they see how things are changing," she said. 

"They see that the energy transition is not coming, it is here — and it is gaining momentum every year."

But McKenzie also warned against the potential for "greenwashing," a term used to describe the use of misleading or deceptive environmental claims by corporations, to occur at COP28. 

She said many oil and gas companies have so far made a lot of climate promises but have yet to invest the tens of billions of dollars needed to see those promises through.

"We've seen a lot of announcements, we've seen a lot of targets. Those are great first steps. But we haven't seen a lot of real absolute investment in technology that would reduce emissions from the sector," she said.

"We've seen a lot of talk. We're looking to see more action to back up that talk."

Canadian oil production is expected to hit an all-time high within the next two years, according to a recent Deloitte report. 

The vast majority of the increase in Canadian oil production is expected to come from the oilsands, where companies are working on thermal expansion projects that will link new assets with existing facilities to speed up development at a lower cost.

However, oilsands bitumen also has a higher emissions profile than oil from many other parts of the world because of the large amounts of energy needed to produce and transport it.


COP28: Pressure builds to eliminate fossil fuel use as oil executive takes over climate talks

COP28 President Sultan al-Jaber

Pressure to phase out fossil fuels mounted Thursday on the oil company chief who took over fragile international climate negotiations that opened in Dubai amid concerns about what some say is contradictory dual roles.

The climate talks newly installed boss began on the hot seat and not just because the planet keeps smashing heat records this year. Days before the United Nations Conference of Parties (COP28) began, reports published meeting preparation notes that linked efforts by the United Arab Emirates national oil company ADNOC to push fossil fuel sales at the same time its CEO and new COP president, Sultan al-Jaber, was meeting to curb climate change. Burning coal, oil and gas is a chief cause of global warming.

Even though al-Jaber vehemently denied the revelations from the BBC and others, several climate negotiations experts say it will likely change the tenor and maybe even the outcome of the two weeks of intense negotiations, taking place about 100 kilometers from where five offshore oil fields flow.

“I think the pressure on the COP president to deliver is pretty clear and has been clear for months,” German climate envoy Jennifer Morgan told The Associated Press. “That’s the focus here to deliver on really a course correction.”

Climate negotiations historian Joanna Depledge said, “whether true or not, the revelations are embarrassing, but I don’t think they put COP in jeopardy. To the contrary, the hope is that the pressure on UAE will tighten.”

And that may mean the UAE will contribute more money to a newly established compensation fund to climate change victims and maybe even tighter language on fossil fuel use, Depledge said.

In a clear effort to start off strongly, negotiators addressed another hot topic—money to help poor countries victimized by floods, storms and droughts—in the first session. Leading the opening meeting, al-Jaber and the United Nations body approved putting a compensation fund for climate change victim nations into operation with host United Arab Emirates and Germany each pledging US$100 million to the new fund, the United Kingdom kicking in up to $75 million and the United States another $17.5 million.

“It’s understandable if the COP hosts, and other fossil fuel nations, were starting to feel the heat on this issue," said Mohamed Adow, of Power Shift Africa. "Fossil fuels are after all the elephant in the room and these countries can’t go on trying to pretend they are not a problem. This extra scrutiny is certainly welcome.”

Al-Jaber’s two positions were already a source of mistrust. The news coverage brings even more attention to the role of coal, oil and gas in climate change at climate talks and highlights efforts to eliminate use of fossil fuels said, World Resources Institute president Ani Dasgupta.

“On one hand, the disclosures erode trust in the COP president and that will make forging a deal harder,” said former U.S. State Department climate lawyer Nigel Purvis, CEO of Climate Advisers. “On the other hand, the UAE now has even more reason to push for a fossil fuel phase-down agreement to show the world that it is serious about becoming the first post-petroleum OPEC country.”

Morgan said Germany and Europe were steadfast in their support for a phase out of fossil fuels and on Wednesday U.S. climate envoy John Kerry said the United States continues to favor a phase out.

A spokesman for the COP presidency office said, “Any pressure felt by the COP Presidency stems from the urgency to deliver ambitious action to course correct and keep 1.5C (the 2015 adopted international climate threshold) within reach.”

Climate Analytics CEO Bill Hare said the UAE has pushed for a less stringent “phase down” instead of a stricter “phase out” of fossil fuels. He called the phase down phrase “window dressing” for increased oil and gas drilling.

Recent reporting “absolutely reinforces everyone’s concerns about greenwashing,” Hare said Thursday. “And that means that the COP president needs to stand back from his oil interests and look at the interests of the planet as a whole.”

Hare, like Dasgupta, Purvis, Depledge and others, said in the end the reporting will mean al-Jaber and oil interests will have to shepherd a stronger agreement to get rid of fossil fuels.

United Nations climate chief Simon Stiell told negotiators that he was sick of the “baby steps” taken so far to fight climate change, challenging them to do far more and faster.


“If we do not signal the terminal decline of the fossil fuel era as we know it, we welcome our own terminal decline,” Stiell said. “And we choose to pay with people’s lives.”

Minutes after taking the gavel on the first day of climate negotiations, al-Jaber referred to the need for change in the way the world gets its energy.

“I know there are strong views on the idea of including language on fossil fuels,’’ al-Jaber said. “I ask you all to work together. Be flexible. Find common ground. Come forward with solutions and achieve consensus.”

Yet he also talked about the “bold choice” of including oil companies more in climate talks and the push for net zero industry emissions by 2050.

WRI’s Dasgupta said there’s extra pressure right now because globally multilateralism – when countries work together on issues – is under attack, especially because of recent wars in Ukraine and Gaza and the way the COVID-19 vaccine was distributed. Add to that record heat this year, he said.

“We’ve seen already at 1.2 degrees warming this year the catastrophic heatwaves, floods and other events that have happened around the world,” Climate Analytics Hare said. “We are facing epic wreckage here. If we can’t get this problem under control.”

Al-Jaber said he hopes negotiators over the next two weeks can change things.

“Let’s restore faith in multilateralism,” al-Jaber said. “Let’s deliver some good news to the world that really needs it today.”

___

Read more of AP’s climate coverage at http://www.apnews.com/climate-and-environment.

Follow Seth Borenstein on X, formerly known as Twitter, at @borenbears

Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

ALBERTA

PATHWAYS ALLIANCE INCREASINGLY CONFIDENT $16.5B CARBON CAPTURE PROJECT WILL GO AHEAD


Amanda Stephenson, The Canadian Press

The oilsands industry group that has proposed building what would be one of the world's largest carbon capture and storage projects says it is more confident than ever it will go ahead with construction.

The Pathways Alliance is a consortium of Canada's largest oilsands companies, which have banded together to propose a $16.5-billion carbon capture and storage network to decrease emissions from oilsands sites in northern Alberta.

The proposed project is the centrepiece of the oilsands' industry's pledge to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, something it must do if Canada is to meet its international climate commitments. But Pathways has not yet made a final investment decision, a fact that has led some environmental groups to question the industry's level of commitment.

After last week's federal fall economic statement, however, Pathways president Kendall Dilling said the likelihood of a positive decision on the project has increased.

In that fiscal update, the federal government provided additional details about its promised carbon capture investment tax credit — including a timeline for its finalization, something oilsands companies had been waiting for.

The industry also received a commitment from the government that up to $7 billion in federal funding will be allocated to special contracts intended to give companies the confidence they need to make major investments to lower their greenhouse gas emissions.

While the details of those so-called "carbon contracts for difference" still have to be hammered out, Dilling said the support received from government thus far has been "more than adequate" for Pathways to continue forging ahead with its project.

"I’m more confident than ever," Dilling said. “We’re much further along on all these fronts than we were a year ago."

The Alberta government is expected to announce its own financial support program for carbon capture development this week.

Dilling said Pathways can't make a final investment decision until its proposed project has been approved by regulators. But the group anticipates filing its regulatory application within the next couple of months, he said.

The approvals process could take at least a year. But Pathways will likely end up placing its first purchase orders for pipe in 2024, Dilling said, so that construction can begin on the proposed 400-km CO2 transportation line as soon as a regulatory permit is granted.

In the meantime, Dilling said, Pathways has already spent $80 million to date on preliminary engineering, design and environmental work — with an expectation that even more money will be spent next year.

"We’ll spend hundreds of millions next year and then into the multiple billions as soon as we get into construction," he said, adding the organization also started formal consultations this fall with Indigenous groups located along the proposed CO2 pipeline's route.

“I do think it’s fair to say that as we submit our regulatory application, and as we proceed with the significant spending through 2024, that should be interpreted as our bona fide commitment to this project and moving it forward," Dilling said.

The Pathways Alliance says its member companies — Suncor Energy Inc., Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., Cenovus Energy Inc., Imperial Oil Ltd., MEG Energy Corp. and ConocoPhillips Canada — have spent a total of $1.8 billion since 2021 on decarbonization efforts.

This figure includes the $80 million spent thus far on the proposed carbon capture and storage network, but also includes investments in cogeneration to replace higher-emitting fuels used to produce electricity and steam, more efficient in situ oilsands recovery techniques, and research and development work.

The oilsands industry currently accounts for about 12 per cent of Canada's overall greenhouse gas emissions.

Pathways Alliance representatives will be in Dubai next week for the upcoming United Nations COP28 climate talks.

The president of the climate summit, Emirati Sultan Ahmed al-Jaber — who is also CEO of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company — has urged oil and gas companies to be "central to the solution" to fighting climate change.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 27, 2023.

— With files from The Associated Press

LA REVUE GAUCHE - Left Comment: Search results for CCS 







Canadians lose financial confidence amid economic concerns: index

Canadians’ financial confidence declined this year, according to an index of Canadians’ views, spurred by concerns over the trajectory of the economy and governments’ ability to manage the situation.

The IG Wealth Management Financial Confidence Index, released Tuesday, tracked the overall financial confidence of Canadians based on 10 survey questions related to their personal financial outlook, planning and literacy as well as trust in the economy and the current financial situation. 

The confidence index dropped to 50 in 2023, down from 51 in 2022 and 57 in 2021. 

“While Canadians are feeling relatively stable with their current personal financial situation, there are significant concerns about where things could be headed in the year ahead and in our ability to successfully navigate this uncertainty,” Damon Murchison, the president and CEO of IG Wealth Management, said in a press release. 

“This can, in part, be attributed to the apprehension felt over the last year about the cost of living, rising interest rates and intensifying global tensions.” 

Canada’s trust in the economy fell significantly, receiving a score of 40 from a previous score of 43, the release said. This stemmed from the fact that 60 per cent of respondents indicated they believe the economy is already in a recession, while 68 per cent said they believe Canada is heading for a recession in 2024. 

Adding to fears about the economy, 65 per cent of survey respondents said governments and other institutions are “not doing enough to address the fiscal issues facing the nation.”  

Optimism about economic stability hit 51 per cent in 2023, from 56 per cent a year earlier, the survey found. 

Just under 50 per cent of Canadians were found to be concerned that inflation would rise in 2024, the release said, and 20 per cent of those surveyed said they viewed the ability to keep their current standard of living as their largest concern.

WHO HAD THE MOST FINANCIAL CONFIDENCE?

Seniors were found to have the highest levels of financial confidence out of IG’s survey respondents, while confidence for Indigenous people and newcomers fell on an annual basis. 

“Among the community groups … seniors’ confidence levels remained stable at 58, while Indigenous (44) and newcomers to Canada (57) fell six and three points respectively compared with last year,” the release said. 

METHODOLGY

The 2023 results presented in this summary report are from an Ipsos survey conducted online from Sept. 26 to Oct. 2. A total sample of 2,000 respondents from across Canada participated in the survey. Weighting was applied to the total sample by age, gender, region and education level to ensure that the composition of the final sample is representative of Canada's adult population according to the latest census data from Statistics Canada. This survey has a credibility interval of +/- 2.2 per cent 19 times out of 20, of what the results would have been had all Canadian adults 18+ been surveyed. 

TD Bank cuts jobs as quarterly results reflect a gloomy economic picture

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TD Bank Group said it's cutting three per cent of staff and setting more money aside for souring loans as it reported fourth quarter results that reflect a deteriorating economic picture.

The bank said Thursday that the cuts, which amount to around 3,100 employees based on its third quarter employee total, will contribute to a $363-million restructuring charge this quarter, and a similar cost in the first half of next year.

"This is a part of a broader restructuring program to streamline, and deliver efficiencies for the bank and then help create capacity to invest in future growth," said chief financial officer Kelvin Tran in an interview. 

Restructuring is expected to save $400 million pre-tax for its 2024 fiscal year, and $600 million a year after that, the bank said.

TD's cuts are a similar amount to what Scotiabank announced during the quarter, and what RBC guided in its third quarter results.

Tran said TD has already made some cuts and will continue to do so throughout next year, while it will also achieve some of the reductions through attrition and will work to redeploy staff where possible.

Along with severance and other personnel-related costs, the charges also cover it pulling back on its real estate footprint and asset impairments.

The charges, combined with increased provisions for bad loans, put pressure on earnings that worked out to $2.89 billion or $1.49 per diluted share for the quarter ended Oct. 31, down from a profit of $6.67 billion or $3.62 per diluted share a year earlier.

TD chief financial officer Kelvin Tran said it was a mixed quarter in a "challenging environment," as the bank also warned that it will be hard to meet its medium-term targets around earnings growth and return on equity.

"What we see for the following year, in 2024, is actually a quite complex environment, including continued normalizing of (provisions for credit loss)" said Tran. 

"That's why we think it's gonna be challenging to meet that those targets."

The bank set aside $878 million in the quarter for bad loans, up $261 million from last year, and a little higher than what analysts were expecting.

The rise in provisions come as concerns increase on the potential for an economic slowdown or recession, and the strain on borrowers as waves of mortgage renewals are coming in the next few years at what could be much higher interest rates.

The bank remains confident in its portfolio, said Tran.

"For sure the higher rates are putting pressure on the consumer, but we feel that we are very well prepared for that."

Quarterly results also included $197 million in costs related to its acquisition of Cowen Inc. 


On an adjusted basis, TD says it earned $1.83 per diluted share, down from an adjusted profit of $2.18 per diluted share a year ago.

Analysts on average had expected an adjusted profit of $1.90 per share, according to estimates compiled by financial markets data firm Refinitiv. 

Results were further off the $1.92 that Scotia Capital Inc. had expected, said analyst Meny Grauman.

"The miss to our numbers was primarily driven by lower-than-expected total revenues (reflecting lower non-interest revenues), and higher credit losses and expenses, partially offset by lower-than-forecasted taxes."

The bank also raised its dividend as it said it would now pay a quarterly dividend of $1.02 per share, up from 96 cents.

TD said its Canadian personal and commercial banking segment earned $1.68 billion in its latest quarter, down from $1.69 billion in the same quarter last year, as higher provisions for credit losses and non-interest expenses were partially offset by revenue growth.

In the U.S., TD's retail business earned $1.28 billion in the most recent quarter, down from $1.54 billion a year earlier.

TD's wealth management and insurance business earned $501 million, down from $516 million a year ago, while its wholesale banking operations earned $17 million, down from $261 million in the same quarter last year.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 30, 2023.



BC

Coastal GasLink pipeline mechanically complete before year-end deadline

The Coastal GasLink pipeline that stretches across northern B.C. is mechanically complete ahead of the company's year-end deadline. 

A statement from TC Energy Corp. says history has been made by finishing Canada's first pipeline to the West Coast in over 70 years. 

The company announced in October that the installation of the pipe was finished, while mechanical completion means the end of construction, successful hydrotesting of the full 670-kilometre line and engineering reviews. 

The statement says Coastal GasLink's team is in the field getting ready to deliver gas to the LNG Canada processing and export facility in Kitimat, on B.C.'s northern coast. 

It says that while construction crews have been packing up, reclamation work still needs to be finished and some of the workforce will return next spring. 

Planning for the pipeline began a decade ago and the project has been delayed by protests, including train blockades by First Nations across the country. 

The pipeline was originally estimated to cost $6.2 billion, but that climbed to $14.5 billion in the most recent price tag released by TC Energy earlier this year. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 28, 2023.