Home » BLOG » More pain for Canada’s natural gas producers: U.S. drillers ready to pounce and reverse flow northward
natural-gas.jpg

More pain for Canada’s natural gas producers: U.S. drillers ready to pounce and reverse flow northward

Nine years ago, supplies piped from Canada met 16 per cent of U.S. demand for natural gas. By 2014, as U.S. output rose to a record for a fourth straight year, Canadian supplies had slipped under 10 per cent.

U.S. gas drillers battered through the lowest prices in 17 years have found another release valve for their output: Canada.

Over the past 5 years, the shale boom that unlocked vast supplies of gas across The united states has tripled pipeline shipments from the U.S. to Mexico, and spurred the very first seaborne exports from the lower 48 states. Now, pipeline companies led by Spectra Energy Corp., TransCanada Corp. and Energy Transfer Partners LP are gearing up to a lot more than double the flow into Canada by 2027, according to the Canadian Energy Research Institute.

It’s another obstacle for Canadian producers.

The push begins next year, with plans to open or expand a minimum of three major pipelines and reverse the flow northward on a fourth. Meanwhile, TransCanada might be going a step further, engaging in acquisition talks with Columbia Pipeline Group Inc., a business with a direct route in to the U.S.’s prolific Marcellus shale play. The efforts come as gas stockpiles reach historic highs, prices have fallen almost 40 per cent because the end of 2011 and the fuel has built itself as the Bloomberg Commodity Index’s worst performer. All of that has spurred a desperate drive by drillers to expand their markets.

“There’s so much supply growth in the eastern U.S. that producers are seeking all outlets to obtain the gas to promote,” Martin King, an analyst at FirstEnergy Capital Corp. in Calgary, said in a phone interview. “It’s another obstacle for Canadian producers.”

Home-grown Canadian drillers such as Calgary-based Birchcliff Energy Ltd. and Encana Corp., are already feeling the heat. Nine years ago, supplies piped from Canada met 16 percent of U.S. interest in natural gas. By 2014, as U.S. output rose to a record for any fourth straight year, Canadian supplies had slipped under 10 %.

Some Canadian producers will hurt more than others. People who keep their costs down then sell to markets that don’t vie with supplies in the eastern U.S. will stay competitive, said Jeff Tonken, Birchcliff’s chief executive officer.

Meanwhile Encana, certainly one of Canada’s largest gas producers, has stated it had been cutting spending this season by 55 per cent amid the slide in gas and oil prices. The company can also be reducing its workforce another 20 percent, which means that Encana will have more than halved its quantity of employees and contractors since 2013.

Related

About privatefinancetips

x

Check Also

investors1.jpg

Commodities could be headed for ‘buffalo jump’ as investors rush for the exits, Barclays warns

Commodities including oil and copper are in chance of steep declines as recent advances aren’t ...

ebay.jpg

eBay aims to transform shopping experience to compete with online giants Alibaba, Amazon

TORONTO – EBay, regarded in the early days as an endless repository for Beanie babies ...

kinross.jpg

Kinross study results should be ‘constructive step forward’ for Tasiast

The Tasiast mine in Mauritania has been a giant black cloud over Kinross Gold Corp. ...