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Canada struggles with low oil prices

Oil is a major industry in Canada, writes Nick Cunningham, and the low price environment is taking its toll 鈥 not only on the oil industry, but also on the country's broader economy.

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Chris Wattie/Reuters/File
Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz speaks during a news conference upon the release of the Monetary Policy Report in Ottawa in April.

Canada鈥檚 oil industry has had a rough couple of months, with production and exports taking a hit.

Low oil prices are cutting into the profits of major producers. Production from Alberta鈥檚 oil sands is costly and requires a high oil price to justify the expense.

In fact, the fall in prices could significantly impact production levels decades from now. Oil companies are shelving large investments because they no longer look profitable. For example, earlier this year Royal Dutch Shell a potential 200,000 barrel-per-day oil sands mine. Overall, Canada鈥檚 oil patch could see a $23 billion cut in in 2015, a decline of almost a third from last year. Unless oil prices bounce back, a lot of projects may not move forward.

Lack of investment now translates to lower oil production in the future. Canada may 5.3 million barrels per day in 2030, according to the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP), much lower than the 6.4 million barrels per day the group predicted last year. ()

But again, a lot depends on what happens with oil prices. The decision by OPEC to play for market share doesn鈥檛 bode well.

鈥淚t really depends on how long OPEC decides they want to keep pricing at this level with their quotas that they鈥檝e established,鈥 Greg Stringham, CAPP vice-president of markets and oil sands, told the .

The contraction underway in Canada鈥檚 oil sands has been hugely damaging to the broader Canadian economy. declined by the most in over six years, on an annualized basis. The figures stunned most economists who had expected modest growth, and it indicates that Canada鈥檚 economy is feeling the pain of low oil prices much worse than previously expected.

Canada posted its worst trade deficit in history for the month of March, and the hit a record $7 billion. Alberta could see its crater by 17 percent this year. ()

But aside from oil prices, several short-term events have also taken their toll. Several major oil sands projects were taken offline for maintenance. And a sudden outbreak of wildfires forced oil sands producers to shutter some major sources of production.

Cenovus Energy shut down its Foster Creek project in May due to the fires, reducing output by 233,000 barrels per day. The fires, combined with planned maintenance, have from 4.59 million barrels per day down to 3.98 million barrels per day, or around 10 percent of total production. The fires could knock off 0.3 percent in growth for the second quarter.

New data shows that the pull back in Canada is affecting its level of oil exports to the United States. Oil exports dropped from 3 million barrels per day in January to 2.89 million barrels per day in March, according to . ()

Crude-by-rail shipments fell by 25 percent in the first quarter, down to just 120,000 barrels per day, although part of the reason for that is because several pipelines have been completed, diverting oil off the rails. Shipping oil by pipeline can cost under $10 per barrel, whereas moving it by rail can add $15 to $20 to the cost.

Environmental groups that struck oil sands producers as a sort of sick irony, as wildfires are expected to become more common and severe due to climate change, which is being driven by fossil fuel combustion.

So not everyone is upset that Canada鈥檚 oil production has recently taken a hit. A group of 100 American and Canadian scientists 听calling for a moratorium on all new oil sands development. 鈥淚f Canada wants to participate constructively in the global effort to stop climate change, we should first stop expanding the oil sands. More growth simply shows Canada has gone rogue,鈥 Thomas Homer-Dixon, professor of governance innovation at the University of Waterloo, said in a press release.

For now investment is slowing. But that would change if oil prices rebound.

By Nick Cunningham of Oilprice.com

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