After nearly a decade of oil prices averaging over $70 per barrel, you’d imagine that OPEC members would be swimming in money. But through some astonishing feats of financial ineptitude they seem to have blown the windfall. Even the wealthiest member, Saudi Arabia, appears to be hitting up capital markets for a loan. A recent report in Reuters pointed out that Saudi Arabia is about to borrow $6-8 billion. What's more, six oil-exporting nations in the Gulf region plan to borrow $20 billion. How [Read more]
Reducing methane emissions: for politicians and environmentalists a blessing in the skies, for industry a blessing in disguise
Recently, US President Barack Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau discussed the importance of reducing methane gas emissions from oil and gas operations. Both countries have plans to limit fugitive gas emissions, which are far more complicit in greenhouse gas effects than carbon dioxide. Predictably, responses were split along the established and boring battle lines, with environmentalists cheering and energy industry groups lowering the flags to half-mast. Rather than get caught up [Read more]
OPEC a spent force? No, but the world has no oil supply cushion
For 30 years, OPEC has been busy manipulating the price of oil towards whatever deviant objective is on their minds. They’ve been pretty good at it, but the recent oil price collapse has led to a general conclusion that OPEC is dead, that shale oil production has robbed the cartel of its power. This near-uniform consensus is reminiscent of the sheep-like positive view of the US housing market circa 2006, and it may well have consequences that are just as severe. OPEC has finally and [Read more]
For Alberta, which four letter word is more damaging – debt or coal? It’s time to allocate scarce resources wisely
Alberta's NDP government is proposing to phase out coal fired power plants in the province by 2030, with replacement electricity coming from renewable sources like wind and solar. Ontario has a similar feel-good plan, however the multi-billion dollar price tags of these initiatives raise some questions about the best way to achieve the goal of reduced emissions. Frankly, it's been a fiasco for Ontario, with a debt problem bigger than California's being compounded by effortless spending on [Read more]
Canada supplies an abundance of raw materials that the world requires, as cleanly and efficiently as possible. You’re welcome!
There are regions in the world that have low population densities in conjunction with voluminous amounts of raw materials. Others, the opposite. One of the wonders of the global trade system is that these imbalances are efficiently sorted out. Not always however, without a few hiccups. The logistical hiccups are understandable and that's what engineers are made for. The ideological or baseless ones are far more irritating, the result of misguided initiatives that have cleverly captured the [Read more]
Obama’s irrational oil tax: Unintended consequences and why Energy East is critical for Canada
On February 5, US President Barack Obama floated the idea of adding a $10 per barrel tax on oil. What is meant by a tax on oil is anyone’s guess; the concept itself is so formless and ill conceived you can pencil in any interpretation that turns your crank and you’ll be as far ahead as the rest of us. At the very least, the proposal should be a poster child for the law of unintended consequences. It’s hard to know where to even start trying to analyze the chaos this would cause. Little is [Read more]
The US presidential campaign – a public starved for political courage contemplates the unthinkable
Twenty years ago a diminutive but out-sized Texan with a mildly plucked-chicken demeanor about him ran for the US presidency, and the race became interesting for the first time in ages. A singular individual with good ideas, great judgment, and the courage of independent thought shook up the political scene in a big way. The individual was Ross Perot, who had built a reputation as a no nonsense problem solver that fearlessly took on bureaucracies and challenged entrenched sacred cows wherever [Read more]
Scorched earth energy extraction – are shale resources being developed wisely?
Low oil and natural gas prices are now expected for the foreseeable future, as is evidenced by a glance at future strip prices that are unusually flat - crude oil futures prices, for example don’t rise above $50 until 2022. Low price expectations are primarily based on the notion that infinite shale resources will leap forth from the ground upon command, at the first sign of commodity price increases. That may be so in the short term, but an important misconception is that these newly [Read more]
Saudi oil filling a New Brunswick refinery – what kind of a domestic energy policy is that?
A Calgary based oil trader wishing to remain anonymous recently went on record to say that Irving Oil has "fixed the 299,235t Kamakshi Prem to ship crude on January 21 from Ras Tanura, Saudi Arabia to its 300,000 b/d refinery in St. John, NB in Canada." Yes you read that right, Canada’s largest refinery, the Irving Oil New Brunswick facility, imports oil from Saudi Arabia. If you study crude trading markets, that news won't come as much of as surprise since waterborne crude can originate [Read more]
The Ladyfern legend: huge reserves, frenzied drilling, and no one made money. Sound familiar?
North America is presently in a comfortable natural gas supply position. This is due to the rapid development of shale gas reserves. While shale deposits have been known about for decades, recent rapid changes in technology unlocked huge amounts of gas at moderate prices. New fracking techniques and more efficient capital usage enabled rapid development of these huge reservoirs. Production has indeed increased dramatically, and well productivity has also boomed. It’s almost like a [Read more]








