General
comments from Rice Farmer --
It's
a fact that producers have built up their reserves over the past year
or so because sustained high oil prices have provided strong
incentives for exploration and drilling. But just looking at the
numbers is deceiving. As one Japanese peak oil advocate constantly
says, "With energy, quality is everything." Indeed so.
Quality is falling because we've already used much of the good stuff.
KSA is moving into its heavy oil reserves. And now we have news that
Venezuela has higher reserves than KSA, but the dirty little secret
is that much of Venezuela's oil is heavy, some of it even like tar.
It takes more energy and money to develop and to refine, and in fact
many refineries can't handle such heavy oil. And the energy yield is
lower. So we're moving into a time when you can have more oil in
quantity, but it will yield less useful energy.
Further,
the decline in oil prices is now endangering the development of junk
oil like Canadian tar sands. Here's another way in which oil reserve
numbers are deceiving: The reserves are in fact there, but if they
can't be economically developed, they're useless. There's lots of
gold in the oceans, so why isn't anyone extracting it and getting
rich? Same reason.
If
we want to continue using oil, we had better hope for sustained high
oil prices.
Experts
warn that Alberta's success story could unravel in face of falling
oil prices as investors weigh up whether to pull the plug on
lucrative projects
14
June, 2012
Six
weeks ago Canada's booming tar sands industry was growing so fast
that it looked possible it might one day overtake every major
oil-producing nation except for Saudi Arabia.
With
West Texas Intermediate crude trading at more than $105 a barrel
there was no question the vast, but costly to extract, reserves of
oil contained in the tar sands of the Alberta province would yield a
huge profit.
Just
how vast an economic opportunity this presented for Canada was laid
bare in BP's latest statistical review of world energy, published
yesterday.
This
showed that while Canada's tar sands-dominated crude production stood
at 4.3 per cent of global output last year, the country actually
houses 10.6 per cent of the world's proven, recoverable oil reserves.
This is the third largest reserve of any nation – in other words,
even after a decade-long boom, Alberta was only warming up.
After
two years of sustained high oil prices, investors had regained the
confidence that was shattered when the financial crisis pulled oil
below $40 a barrel and prompted them to shelve $80bn of planned
developments in 2008 and 2009.
An
unprecedented 16 projects were scheduled to come on stream over the
next four years, increasing the output of bitumen – a heavy form of
crude – by 1 million barrels a day to 2.6 million.
But
a lot has changed since the beginning of May. West Texas crude has
tumbled by about a fifth to hover around $80 a barrel and there are
fears of a continued decline that threatens the viability of large
swathes of Canada's biggest industry.
Last
week, Wood Mackenzie, the oil experts, came out and said what many in
the industry had increasingly been fearing. Noting the tar sands'
high-energy extraction process meant production costs were among the
highest of any oil fields in the world, Wood Mackenzie warned that
falling – or simply volatile – prices "could result in
operators delaying or cancelling unsanctioned projects."
While
this may not feed through into reduced production straight away, in
the longer term output could be hit substantially, Wood Mackenzie
warned. "There is little scope to adjust near-term production,
due to the amount of capital already sunk. However, if the external
environment proves to be unattractive, companies do have the option
to significantly change the longer-term production outlook,"
Wood Mackenzie said.
Wood
Mackenzie points out that a quarter of planned tar sand projects
scheduled to begin production between 2015 and 2018 are still
"unsanctioned" – meaning their financing is yet to be
finalised and making them particularly vulnerable to delay or
cancellation in the coming months if the oil price is dragged down
further.
In
the longer term, a persistently lower oil price could hit tar sand
investment far harder. Although Albertan oil production dates back to
the 1960s it has only taken off in the last decade and the cost of
production has soared in line with increased competition for labour
and machinery, pushing prices up far more than in the economy at
large.
Competition
from the US mid-West, Canada's main market, is rising rapidly as new
extraction techniques have greatly increased the amount of oil that
can be produced from shale rocks in North Dakota.
This
has created a glut of supply, which has pushed the tar sands oil
price down to about $64 a barrel in recent days, well below even the
price of declining West Texas crude.
To
put this into perspective, it now costs between $80and $100 a barrel
to break even on new Canadian oil sand mines where the sands are dug
up with giant mechanical digging trucks that have hydraulic and
electrically-powered shovels and transported to an extraction plant
in 320 tonne trucks. The bitumen is extracted from the sand, water
and clay by blasting it with hot water and separating it from the
resulting slurry. Less than five years ago, the figure was just $30 a
barrel.
For
deeper reserves, the so-called steam-assisted gravity drainage
drilling method – which injects steam underground and pumps the
bitumen to the surface – costs about $60 a barrel.
Investors
also have concerns about a lack of pipelines to transport the growing
volumes of oil to foreign markets. A number of key pipelines have yet
to gain approval because of environmental concerns. The best known is
Keystone XL, which would run, via the Mid-West, all the way to the
Gulf of Mexico, connecting the Canadian tar sands to international
markets.
Just
how dire the need for additional pipeline capacity is illustrated in
the huge disparity that has opened up in the West Texas and Brent
crude oil prices. "The differential between Brent and West Texas
Intermediate reached a record premium (in $/bbl) due to
infrastructure bottlenecks driven by rapidly-rising US and Canadian
production," said yesterday's BP report. Yesterday, Brent crude
was fetching about $97.50 a barrel, compared to around $83.50 for
West Texas.
Several
oil sands projects have recently come on to the market. Just last
week, it emerged that the billionaire Koch brothers in the US are
hoping to sell stakes in six tar sand properties which analysts
estimate could fetch up to $2.9bn, while Shell put Orion, a small
steam-driven project in north-eastern Alberta, on the block.
Although
it produces just 5,000 barrels a day, it has been granted regulatory
approval to expand that to more than 30,000. These offerings come
after ConocoPhillips put a multi-billion dollar package of Canadian
tar sand assets up for sale. "We are definitely at that point
where if the price of oil comes off much more oil sands will lose
their attractiveness. They will be the first area of global
production to come under pressure," said Sanford Bernstein
analyst Iain Pyle.
Furthermore,
companies are rejigging plans to expand existing projects rather than
building expensive new ones, Mr Pyle adds. Shell, for example, said
last week it planned to increase production by up to 90,000 barrels a
day at its Athabasca oil sands project at Alberta by
"debottlenecking" – or improving the efficiency of –
its existing development.
However,
the FTSE 100 oil giant insisted it would also press ahead with a
proposed new development of its Jackpine Mine in the Athabasca oil
sands – the world's biggest known reservoir of crude bitumen –
but was still waiting on regulatory approval.
The
long-running environmental battle is also set to escalate in the
coming months. Canada has been battling the EU since 2009 when Europe
proposed a measure called the Fuel Quality Directive, which sought to
reduce the level of greenhouse gases emitted by vehicles by labelling
tar-sands generated fuel as "dirty". Virtually no tar sands
fuel reaches European refineries from Canada but Ottawa is concerned
a European ruling will influence other markets, including the US,
where most of its oil ends up.
A
stalemate in February had 12 EU nations voting for, eight against and
seven (including Britain) abstaining. Another vote was planned for
this month but has now been postponed until next year after Joe
Oliver, Canada's natural resources minister, demanded an extensive
study into the validity of the EU proposal.
With
Canada's vast tar sand oil reserves forecast to contribute C$2.1
trillion to the nation's economy over the next 25 years, that letter
is but the tip of the industry lobbying iceberg.
However,
the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producer forecasts that oil
sands production will double from 1.6m to 3.2m barrels a day by 2020
and more than triple to 5.0m by 2030 – backed up by Canada's
political stability, the relative ease of its extraction, the
certainty of the volume and location of the oil and the fact that
global demand is only going to go up in the longer term. It's just
the growth could be a good bit lower than many may have forecast six
weeks ago.
Energy
boost in crude health
Rising
crude prices and improving extraction techniques have increased the
volume of economically viable oil reserves in the world by 60 per
cent in the past two decades, according to BP's latest statistical
review of energy.
The
volume of global reserves hit 1.65tn barrels of oil in 2011,
according to new BP figures, as the crude price hit its second
highest inflation-adjusted price ever, after 1864.
This,
combined with technological innovation, has made extraction of
hydrocarbons from tar sands, rocks and deep water increasingly
common.
Although
fears that the declining oil price may hit some high-cost projects,
such as in the Canadian tar sands, production is likely to remain
historically high for the foreseeable future.
BP's
report also revealed that the amount of coal consumed across the
world jumped by 5.4 per cent last year to its largest share of global
energy consumption in more than four decades, dealing a blow to hopes
of hitting key carbon emissions targets.
China's
voracious appetite for coal-generated electricity saw it burning 9.7
per cent more of the black stuff than in 2010, according to BP's
latest statistical review of energy.
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