Canada oil output up despite pipeline woes

Bloomberg

Canada’s lingering crude glut isn’t hindering the country’s growing oil output, according to the National Energy Board’s most recent forecast.
The country’s oil production will average 4.59 million barrels a day, 22,000 more than previously forecast, data from the Canadian energy regulator show. The raised production outlook comes even as pipeline bottlenecks have driven Canadian crude prices to record lows and prompted some producers, including Canadian Natural Resources
Ltd and Athabasca Oil Corp, to reduce output by about 160,000 barrels a day, according to estimates by TD Securities Inc.
The biggest driver of higher output is heavy oil-sands crude, which is forecast to have exceeded 2 million barrels a day in October to average 1.88 million daily barrels for the year. That’s 42,000 barrels a day more than the previously forecast. Output of conventional light and heavy oil also exceeded the earlier forecasts.
The increase might reflect the faster-than-expected ramp-up of Suncor Energy Inc’s Fort Hills oil sands mine, according to Stephen Kallir, upstream research analyst at Wood Mackenzie in Calgary.
The 194,000 barrel-a-day Fort Hills mine started operation earlier this year and will run at 90 percent of capacity through the fourth quarter, Suncor Chief Executive Steve Williams said on a November 1 conference call.
“They are producing above 90 percent capacity as of end of the third quarter,” he said by phone. “We expected that early next year.”
To be sure, the NEB recent data shows production trailing off in December with output lower than forecast earlier.

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