Canada's oil price woes reaching an 'emergency situation,' Cenovus CEO says - Action News
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Canada's oil price woes reaching an 'emergency situation,' Cenovus CEO says

The head of one of the country's largest oilsands producers says Canada's oil price woes are reaching an "emergency situation," and on Wednesday saw his company's call for production cuts echoed by a competitor.

Canadian Natural Resources confirms support for output cuts as prices languish at $15.75 US

'Nobody is making money at this price and this is rapidly becoming an emergency situation in the economy,' says Cenovus Energy CEO Alex Pourbaix. (J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press)

The head of one of the country's largest oilsandsproducers says Canada's oil price woes are reachingan"emergency situation," and on Wednesday saw his company's call for production cuts echoed by a competitor.

Oil "is a provincial resource andwe're giving it away for free,"CenovusEnergy CEO AlexPourbaixsaid on CBCCalgary's morning show,The Eyeopener.

"Nobody is making money at this price and this is rapidly becoming an emergency situation in the economy."

Pourbaixmade the comments following his company's calls for the Alberta government to mandate temporary production cuts to help deal with an oil glut and pipeline bottlenecks that are weighing heavily on many producers.

The value of Western Canadian Select is tracking roughly $40 per barrel less than the U.S. benchmark. On Wednesday it was at $15.75 US a barrel, compared to $56.18 US for West Texas Intermediate.

Calgary-basedCenovusis blamingpoliticalsetbacks for the failuretobuildpipelines, urging the province to take action.

That sentiment was echoed Wednesday by Canadian Natural Resources executive vice chairman Steve Laut, said his companyis "fully supportive of curtailments" by all Alberta producers.

"It's something that has worked in the past," Lauttold CBC News.

Lautnoted that then-premierPeterLougheedcut output in 1980, a point also raised by Cenovus.

"It just makes total sense. It's the simplest, cleanest and most effective way to ensure Albertans get value for resources and end the subsidies to U.S. buyers," Lautsaid.

Analysts have said that while many Canadian oil companies can't seem to catch a break on prices,some American refineries are enjoying a "heyday" because of the price differential.

If the whole sector reined in production, Lautbelieves there probably would bea market response almost immediately from thepsychological effect of the news.

"But I think, depending on what size of curtailment they used, it could be within 30 to 50 days," for the strategy to correct the supply-demandproblem, Laut said.

Canadian Natural Resources executive vice chairman Steve Laut told CBC News that the company is 'fully supportive of curtailments' by all Alberta producers. (Larry MacDougal/Canadian Press)

CNRsaid recentlyit has already cut production by up to 15,000 barrels per dayand could increasethat figure to as much as 55,000 this month and in December.

Canadian prices crashed in September because of a backlog of oil in Alberta.

The Fort McMurray region has increased production throughout this year, but export pipelines are full and several refineries in the U.S. which process heavy oil from Alberta, have shut down for maintenance.

Some industry experts now expectlow prices for Canadian heavy crude could persist into 2020, though more export pipeline space is expected once Enbridge's Line 3 replacement project is complete in about 12 months.

The situation has stung many Alberta producers, with one estimate pegging the cost to the sector at $100 million a day.

But some observers have noted that not all companies are affected the same way and it would be difficult to get everyone to agree onoutput cuts.

Large integrated companies would not be affected like companies without refineries or other options for their oil productions, said Warren Mabee, an expert on energy policy at Queen's University.

Suncor president and CEO Steve Williams told analysts this month that the market is working. (Jeff McIntosh/Canadian Press)

Indeed, Suncor's CEO said this monthhis company hasfull pipeline access to market for all of its production.

"That was a strategic decision we made," Steve Williams said in a financial call with analysts.

"I have a great deal of sympathy for where the market is, and I understand the pressure that others are under. We invested for this circumstance to make sure it had it's not a zero impact but minimal impact on us.

"So what's happening is, the market is working. The higher cost producers are having to pull back because they're not making any margin on their last barrel. We are not in that circumstance."

The provincial government has so far said little about the call for mandated production cuts.

On Wednesday, it reiterated its position thatPremier Rachel Notley is fighting to build new pipelines and pushing Ottawa to step up and help fix the backlog in rail shipments.

However, spokesman Mike McKinnonsaid in an email that "we're not ruling out any options."

In Calgary on Wednesday, the federal natural resources minister saidhe shares Albertan's "frustration" at billions of dollars being lost to the Canadian economy due to oil price discounts linked to export pipeline capacity constraints.

Federal Natural Resources Minister Amarjeet Sohi said Ottawa is focused on finding long-term solutions for the oil sector. (CBC/Scott Neufeld)

But AmarjeetSohisaidOttawa is focused on finding long-term solutions by getting approval for new export pipelines such as the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project it bought in August.

Asked about an Alberta request in October for the federal government to support crude-by-rail shipments, Sohi said the Alberta request is being examined by his department but he hasn't actually seen it.

"My department is engaging with provinces,we are engaging with other federal departments, to see what can be done in the short term," Sohitold reporters.

"But as you know, more than 200,000 barrels of oil is shipped through rail now and that is going up. What we need to do, we need long-term solutions."

With files from The Canadian Press