April 2, 2015
Oil is our most-precious commodity as fuel for the global economy. It is also becoming a scarce commodity, as global production has flattened, while global demand continues to climb relentlessly, everywhere in the world except for the dying economies of Europe and North America. It is a classic “seller’s market.”
Then we have Canada. Under the Harper regime; Canada has rapidly/recklessly ramped-up production of tar sands oil (vying with U.S. shale-oil production for the title of “world’s dirtiest oil”). In less than 20 years; tar sands production has increased by a factor of ten, from less than 200,000 barrels per day to over 2 million barrels per day (mb/d) in 2014. This amounts to annual tar sands production of roughly 750 million barrels.

Thanks to this reckless over-production; Canadian tar sands oil production has created three ultra-expensive/ultra-inefficient bottlenecks for itself:
a) Insufficient refining capacity
b) Insufficient shipping/pipeline infrastructure
c) Insufficient skilled labour
Because of (a) and (b); Canada’s tar sands oil has been sold at “discounts” of up to $40/barrel. Because of (c) and other factors; production costs for tar sands oil (which was already the world’s most-expensive) continue to soar.
Legions of workers must be flown in, housed and fed, adding to costs. Competition for labour is so fierce that some companies now subsidize mortgage payments on $600,000 houses to entice workers to stick around.
The combination of a grossly insufficient labour force, and grossly insufficient infrastructure to support this production is that while it is “the lowest priced oil in the world”, currently trading at a pathetic $36.02 per barrel, it is the most-expensive oil in the world to produce.
In a recent study, CERI [Canadian Energy Research Institute] put the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) break-even price for a steam-driven oil sands project at $84.99 per barrel…For a new mine it is $105.54.
Thanks to the Harper Discount; tar sands oil is currently being ‘sold’ (i.e. given away) at a loss of nearly $50/barrel for existing producers (and much more for new producers). With total annual production of 750 million barrels; that’s an annual loss on tar sands oil production in excess of $30 billion.
With revenues now accounting for less than half of operating costs; any sane government would be looking to scale-back production (if not mothball it entirely), but not the Harper regime. According to the Financial Post:
A total of 14 new oil sands projects are scheduled to start next year [2015] with a combined capacity of 266,240 barrels a day, according to data published by Oilsands Review. That’s 36 per cent more than was started in 2014.
That amounts to an additional 97 million barrels per year, and at current prices, it would increase the annual losses on tar sands production by an additional $4+ billion/year. Fortunately, not all of these projects will ever see a start-up. As awareness of this catastrophic, financial boondoggle begin to set in; the oil-producers themselves are starting to bail-out.
After years of false starts, Goffart [chief executive of Total SA] confirmed suspicions…The company’s $11 billion Joslyn mine was being shelved indefinitely, he said…
In canceling Joslyn, designed to produce 100,000 barrels a day next decade, Goffart underscored why wringing oil from Alberta’s oil sands is, by Total’s reckoning, getting harder to justify…(Just ask Norway’s Statoil – it decided in September to postpone its Corner oil sands venture, blaming high costs and delays building multi-billion dollar pipelines.)
The previous excerpt does more than illustrate the financial suicide of any new investment in tar sands oil; it demonstrates the lack of good faith of the Harper regime, notably Stephen Harper himself. As has been observed in previous commentaries; there is no possible way that this economic (and environmental) catastrophe could be merely an ‘accident’ of gross incompetence.
This was a deliberate betrayal by the Harper government (i.e. an act of economic treason). As already noted; the reason for the current, $30+ billion per year loss on tar sands production is directly attributable to three “bottlenecks”. But readers must keep in mind that any government would ask itself three questions before it started to rapidly ramp-up production of this ultra-dirty oil:
1) Where will the oil be refined?
2) How will it be shipped?
3) Who will provide the labour to produce this oil?

Oil is our most-precious commodity as fuel for the global economy. It is also becoming a scarce commodity, as global production has flattened, while global demand continues to climb relentlessly, everywhere in the world except for the dying economies of Europe and North America. It is a classic “seller’s market.”
Then we have Canada. Under the Harper regime; Canada has rapidly/recklessly ramped-up production of tar sands oil (vying with U.S. shale-oil production for the title of “world’s dirtiest oil”). In less than 20 years; tar sands production has increased by a factor of ten, from less than 200,000 barrels per day to over 2 million barrels per day (mb/d) in 2014. This amounts to annual tar sands production of roughly 750 million barrels.

Thanks to this reckless over-production; Canadian tar sands oil production has created three ultra-expensive/ultra-inefficient bottlenecks for itself:
a) Insufficient refining capacity
b) Insufficient shipping/pipeline infrastructure
c) Insufficient skilled labour
Because of (a) and (b); Canada’s tar sands oil has been sold at “discounts” of up to $40/barrel. Because of (c) and other factors; production costs for tar sands oil (which was already the world’s most-expensive) continue to soar.
Legions of workers must be flown in, housed and fed, adding to costs. Competition for labour is so fierce that some companies now subsidize mortgage payments on $600,000 houses to entice workers to stick around.
The combination of a grossly insufficient labour force, and grossly insufficient infrastructure to support this production is that while it is “the lowest priced oil in the world”, currently trading at a pathetic $36.02 per barrel, it is the most-expensive oil in the world to produce.
In a recent study, CERI [Canadian Energy Research Institute] put the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) break-even price for a steam-driven oil sands project at $84.99 per barrel…For a new mine it is $105.54.
Thanks to the Harper Discount; tar sands oil is currently being ‘sold’ (i.e. given away) at a loss of nearly $50/barrel for existing producers (and much more for new producers). With total annual production of 750 million barrels; that’s an annual loss on tar sands oil production in excess of $30 billion.
With revenues now accounting for less than half of operating costs; any sane government would be looking to scale-back production (if not mothball it entirely), but not the Harper regime. According to the Financial Post:
A total of 14 new oil sands projects are scheduled to start next year [2015] with a combined capacity of 266,240 barrels a day, according to data published by Oilsands Review. That’s 36 per cent more than was started in 2014.
That amounts to an additional 97 million barrels per year, and at current prices, it would increase the annual losses on tar sands production by an additional $4+ billion/year. Fortunately, not all of these projects will ever see a start-up. As awareness of this catastrophic, financial boondoggle begin to set in; the oil-producers themselves are starting to bail-out.
After years of false starts, Goffart [chief executive of Total SA] confirmed suspicions…The company’s $11 billion Joslyn mine was being shelved indefinitely, he said…
In canceling Joslyn, designed to produce 100,000 barrels a day next decade, Goffart underscored why wringing oil from Alberta’s oil sands is, by Total’s reckoning, getting harder to justify…(Just ask Norway’s Statoil – it decided in September to postpone its Corner oil sands venture, blaming high costs and delays building multi-billion dollar pipelines.)
The previous excerpt does more than illustrate the financial suicide of any new investment in tar sands oil; it demonstrates the lack of good faith of the Harper regime, notably Stephen Harper himself. As has been observed in previous commentaries; there is no possible way that this economic (and environmental) catastrophe could be merely an ‘accident’ of gross incompetence.
This was a deliberate betrayal by the Harper government (i.e. an act of economic treason). As already noted; the reason for the current, $30+ billion per year loss on tar sands production is directly attributable to three “bottlenecks”. But readers must keep in mind that any government would ask itself three questions before it started to rapidly ramp-up production of this ultra-dirty oil:
1) Where will the oil be refined?
2) How will it be shipped?
3) Who will provide the labour to produce this oil?
