Drillers say sentiment toward oilpatch nearing 'all-time' lows
CBC News | Posted: November 13, 2019 6:31 PM | Last Updated: December 10, 2019
Industry group forecasts drilling activity to remain flat
Canada's oil well drillers are calling on Ottawa to scrap regulatory changes the federal government introduced this year as the sector is forecasting another difficult year ahead.
The Canadian Association of Oilwell Drilling Contractors says the government should repeal legislation overhauling the approval process for major infrastructure, like oil pipelines, and banning oil tanker traffic on a stretch of Canada's West Coast.
The industry group also called for a guarantee from the federal government that it will complete the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project "using all available tools and resources."
"Following the Canadian federal election in October, the sentiment toward Canadian oil and gas is nearing all-time lows," the association said in a new release on Wednesday.
The group says industry has lost out on billions in foreign capital. It says layoffs continue while some companies are relocating to the United States, taking jobs and equipment with them.
The association made the remarks as it released its drilling forecast for the coming year.
It projects 4,905 wells to be drilled across western Canada in 2020, an increase of nine from 2019.
The rig fleet, meanwhile, is expected to decrease by 48 to 497 drilling rigs.
The number of jobs in the drilling sector is expected to be around 22,313 next year — about the same as this year but 13,731 fewer jobs than there were in 2018.
Canada's oil and gas industry is at a critical turning point, the group said.
"If we do not create an environment where the oil and gas industry can compete internationally, we won't have an industry left in this country," Mark Scholz, the organization's president, said in a statement.
Clarifications:- An earlier version of this story contained some ambiguity about the region the drilling forecast covered. The CAODC forecast is for drilling in Western Canada. December 10, 2019 3:54 PM