A crude correction: Why Nalcor must return 1.3 million barrels of Hibernia South production - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:46 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

A crude correction: Why Nalcor must return 1.3 million barrels of Hibernia South production

A reassessment of the oil resource at the Hibernia South Extension project has determined that Nalcor Energy received 1.3 million barrels more than it was entitled to.

Assessment of the resource found Nalcor was receiving more oil than it was entitled

Newfoundland and Labrador's energy corporation, Nalcor, owns a 10 per cent ownership interest in the Hibernia South project, which is an extension of the main Hibernia project. But a reassessment of Hibernia South production and the resource has determined that Nalcor has received 1.3 million barrels of oil more than it was entitled to. (CBC)

A portion of Newfoundland and Labrador's equity stake in an offshore oil project has been stripped, and the Crown energy corporation that owns that asset, NalcorEnergy, will have to surrender 1.3 million barrels of oil to other companies involved in the project over the next two years.

That's the outcome of a redetermination of the ownership structure in the Hibernia South Extension, which has been producing oil in theJeanned'Arc Basin, 320 kilometres southeast of St. John's and the site of four producing oil fields, for the past decade.

But it's not all bad news for Nalcor: it appears there's more oil in Hibernia South than was originally projected.

An updated assessmentindicates Nalcor will recover 11 per cent more crudeduring the life of the project, even at the reduced equity stake, according to a spokesperson for OilCo, the new provincial Crown corporation that manages Nalcor's oil and gas assets.

Nalcor paid for oil it did not own

Hibernia South is a subsea project that ties back to the Hibernia platform, and involves the same consortium of six oil companies led by ExxonMobilCanadainvolved with the main Hibernia field, along withNalcor.

Nalcor, which is being integrated into Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro and will soon disappear as a brand,formalized a deal to purchasea 10 per cent equity stake in Hibernia Southin 2010.

So why was Nalcor's interest in Hibernia Southreduced from 10 per cent to 8.7 per cent, effective March 31?

Nalcor has an ownership interest in two of the three Hibernia South licence areas, and the other partners also have different ownership interests across the three licences.

In scenarios like this, there is typically a rebalancing, or "true-up," of the resource among the partners following the commencement of commercial production, and owners get a better understanding of where, and in what quantities, the oil reserves are actually located, and what licence areas are most productive.

So in simple terms, Nalcor was being credited for more production than it was entitled to.

A rebate for Nalcor on capital, operating costs

That triggered the so-called redetermination, with 1.3 percentage points shaved off Nalcor'sownership, and a requirement thatNalcor willsurrender 1.3 million barrels of future production to its partners over the next two years.

"With this change in working interest, Nalcor Oil and Gas has produced barrels, which it did not own and is required to repay oil received above the 8.7 per cent revised working interest," a spokesperson for OilCowrote in an email to CBC News.

An OilCo official said Nalcor was not the only Hibernia South partner to see a reduction in its ownership stake, but declined to provide details on the new ownership structure.

A second and final redetermination of ownership interests is expected to occur in 2025, following the same formula to determine whether Nalcor's interests increase, remain static, or decrease again.

The true-up, however, does not include a cash debt from Nalcor to the other Hibernia South partners

"The goal of redetermination is to replace the oil, not the value," the spokesperson explained.

However, it's a significant financial setback for Nalcor, which is forecasting oil production to be down by 1.1 million barrels this year, largely because of the Hibernia South restructuring.

This graphic illustrates the Hibernia Southern Extension, which was completed in summer 2011 and was initially expected to produce more then 170 million barrels of oil. That assessment has since grown by 11 per cent. (HMDC)

As of March 31, those 1.3 millionbarrels of Hibernia South crude would have been valued at $100 million, based on market conditions at that time.

Nalcoralso has an equity position in Hebron, at 4.9 per cent, and a five per cent ownership in the White Rose Extension project.

In 2020, Nalcor'sthree oil assetsgenerated a record $221 million in cash, from a production of 4.6 million barrels.

Meanwhile, Nalcor'sshrinking equity stake in Hibernia South also means it had overpaidfor its share of capital costs, and has received a refund. An official said the amount of that refund could not be disclosed without approval from the other partners in the project.

Nalcor'sfuture operating expenses will also be reduced to reflect the lower ownership interest, according to OilCo.

As of Oct. 31,Nalcorhas earned$823 million in revenue from Hibernia South, which has "greatly contributed" to the $535 million in dividends paid to Nalcor for its offshore ownership interests, according to a statement.

The provincial government has also received $127 million in royalties from Nalcor'sownership stake in Hibernia South, while Nalcor has paid nearly $600 million in capital and operating costs.

At the time the Hibernia South agreement was signed in 2010,there were projections of$13 billion in returns over the life of the project to the provincial government in the form of royalties, corporate income tax, and dividends to Nalcor.

CBC News has requested an update on those projections from the Department of Finance.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador