'Old'
news I hadn't caught up with. Solid Energy in NZ has had to put off
more workers in Greymouth on account of the low price of coal
Economic collapse might have saved the planet where it not for the fact that we are now seeing the consequence of carbon emissions from 40 years ago.
Total
E&P Canada shelves oilsands project over escalating cost
Total
E&P Canada is putting its Joslyn oilsands project northwest of
Fort McMurray, Alta., on hold indefinitely, saying Thursday that the
economics aren't good enough to move ahead.
CTV,
29
May, 2013
The
decision means 150 jobs will be cut by the end of this year, but CEO
Andre Goffart said some of those workers may be moved to other parts
of the French energy giant's global operations.
On
a conference call with reporters, Goffart said the challenges Joslyn
is facing aren't confined to that project alone.
"Costs
are continuing to inflate, when the oil price -- and specifically the
netbacks for the oilsands -- are remaining stable at best, thus,
squeezing the margins. We see that this situation cannot be
sustainable in the long term," he said.
"We
know that mining projects are challenging. New mining projects are
all megaprojects and they are very capital intensive... There is a
clear shift now from the industry on cost discipline and return on
investment versus the pace of development."
Total
and the project's minority partners will now spend time trying to
find ways to drive down costs at Joslyn, but there is no timeline for
when it may be revived.
"We
believe that the best way to unlock this project is not to wait for
the price increase, but to work proactively on cost optimization, and
that's what we are doing."
Goffart
says the other partners -- Suncor Energy Inc. (TSX:SU), Occidental
Petroleum and Inpex Canada -- all agree it was best to be put Joslyn
on ice for now.
There
were no indications Thursday as to whether the ownership structure of
Joslyn would change. Currently, Total is operator with a 38.25 per
cent stake. Suncor has 36.75 per cent, Occidental has 15 per cent and
Inpex has 10 per cent.
The
price tag of the project, which received regulatory approval in 2011
after a lengthy process, was most recently pegged at $11 billion. It
had aimed to start producing 160,000 barrels a day toward the end of
the decade.
Another
oilsands venture involving Total, the Suncor-operated Fort Hills
oilsands mine, got the go-ahead in October. Fort Hills is expected to
cost $13.5 billion and start producing oil in 2017.
"Given
the previous timeline, construction on Joslyn would likely have begun
prior to the start-up of Fort Hills, potentially further inflating
labour costs in the Fort McMurray region. We view the delay of Joslyn
as a positive for the industry, eliminating (at least for the time
being) yet another stressor on oilsands construction costs,"
Desjardins Securities analyst Justin Bouchard wrote in a note to
clients.
"Even
though our sense is that Suncor did not want to sanction the project
until Fort Hills is completed, we wonder if Total's decision to halt
the project has less to do with costs and more to do with not having
partner buy-in."
Total
and Suncor have opted to scrap their Voyageur oilsands upgrader
altogether. Joslyn, Fort Hills and Voyageur were part of a
joint-venture deal Suncor and Total inked in late 2010.
Greenpeace
campaigner Mike Hudema said the delay is good news for the
environment and for nearby communities.
"The
fact Total couldn't find a workable economic formula should be a
warning sign to the government that it needs to diversify Alberta's
economy and its job force rather than betting the farm on a high
carbon asset the world may soon turn away from," he said.
Hannah
McKinnon, with Environmental Defence, says the delay shows oilsands
growth isn't inevitable.
"Tarsands
are high cost, high risk and high carbon. Josyln North's mothballing
is the latest in a developing trend that doesn't bode well for the
industry's future. The economics of the tarsands are marginal today.
And in a carbon constrained world, they become increasingly
unviable," she said.
McKinnon
said it's "no coincidence" Joslyn's shelving comes on the
heels of an indefinite delay of the Keystone XL pipeline, which would
enable oilsands crude to flow to Texas refineries.
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