Growing U.S. production, shift to Asian markets and increased
competition for investment pose challenges for Canadian industry
TORONTO, April 3, 2013 /CNW/ - While the approval of the Keystone
pipeline is important, it alone is not going the fix the challenges
facing Canada's oil and gas sector, finds a new report from CIBC World
Markets.
"Keystone will improve access stateside and put a cap on adverse price
differentials for Western Canadian producers," says Avery Shenfeld,
chief economist at CIBC. "But recent developments in the global oil
industry—from Venezuela to Iraq, from North Dakota to Mexico, from
California to China—suggest that Keystone is just one of several
important pieces of the puzzle for Canada's energy sector.
"Three key trends—rising shale oil prospects stateside, the shift in
consumption growth to Asia, and a growing list of oil producing
countries open to foreign participation—all pose challenges if Canada
is to maximize the value of its resource base."
The report notes that shale oil has gone from a negligible share of U.S.
production five years ago, to almost a third today. At $40-60 a barrel,
the full-cycle costs of U.S. shale oil are well below that of a
conventional oil sands mining operation, but above most Middle East
production. This oil is also now competing for the same channels used
to transport Canadian crude to market.
"Growth in U.S. shale output, coupled with a much softer trajectory for
medium term demand growth stateside, put America's net import
requirements on a collision course with Canadian plans to ramp up its
output by a further two million barrels a day over the balance of this
decade," adds Mr. Shenfeld.
As a result, Canada's traditional advantage from being right next to the
world's largest oil importer is unlikely to last much longer. In fact,
it is forecast that China will displace the U.S. as the world's top
importer of oil in 2013. Only a decade ago, the country produced more
oil than it consumed.
"The world will still need Canada's crude, given still ample demand
growth ahead for Asia, and we doubt supply-demand conditions will
permanently sustain prices below Canadian project break-evens," says
Mr. Shenfeld. "But it's increasingly important that Canada move on one
or more of the alternative pipelines to get our product headed Asia's
way. Canada's own central and eastern oil markets are another option,
but longer term demand growth there is also likely to be lackluster."
The report notes that global competition is also changing the energy
sector with countries like Iraq, Mexico and Venezuela now focused on
developing production for export.
"Canada was once among only a handful of countries welcoming foreign
capital in the oil sector," writes Peter Buchanan, a senior economist
at CIBC, in the report. "Just over a decade ago, nearly three-quarters
of global oil reserves were effectively off limits to major global
players, due to state-run firms, outright prohibitions, security or
other considerations."
He notes that today, there are many places seeking investment to develop
and expand production. Not only in the U.S., but now Iraq is
rebuilding, Mexico is looking more open to inflows of foreign capital
and expertise, and the winds of political change could at some point
see the same swing in Venezuela.
Mr. Shenfeld believes that clarity on the pipeline front is critical to
attracting the capital—both domestic and foreign—needed to finance the
growth in Canadian production. He also believes governments will need
to do more to bring in needed investment.
"The policy implication for Canada is that while Ottawa has imposed some
new restraints on oil sands activity by foreign state-owned enterprise,
other measures on the policy dial may have to move the other way. With
more competition for investor dollars, deficit-fighting federal and
provincial governments may have less room to manoeuvre in setting taxes
and royalties than was earlier the case.
"Both pipelines and reasonable royalties will be critical to avoid
killing the black-gold goose."
The complete CIBC World Markets report is available at: http://research.cibcwm.com/economic_public/download/eiapr13.pdf.
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SOURCE: CIBC World Markets
Avery Shenfeld, Chief Economist, at 416-594-7356, avery.shenfeld@cibc.ca; or Kevin Dove, Communications and Public Affairs at 416-980-8835, kevin.dove@cibc.com