OPEC oil glut is shattering Harper's superpower dream - Action News
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BusinessAnalysis

OPEC oil glut is shattering Harper's superpower dream

OPEC seems to have won its game of brinksmanship with the global oil market. Now with a worldwide oil glut, Canada is among the first to suffer as oil production hits two-year lows. Don Pittis asks: Will anyone miss Canadian oil?

Producers' brinksmanship has worked, and Canada is cutting production

Ali Ibrahim Naimi, Saudi Arabia's Oil Minister, acts like a winner at this week's OPEC conference. There are signs OPEC's brinksmanship is working, and one of the victims is Canadian oil production. But will anyone miss it? (Associated Press)

In the battle to see who blinks first,OPEC hasn't blinked. And it looks like it isn'tgoing to, as it meets this week in Vienna.

Six months ago the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, led by Saudi Arabia, announced it would keep pumping crude even thoughthe world was swimming in the stuff.

While some analysts are predicting a surprise at this week's meeting,mostreports now say OPEC is not considering reining in production.

And whether or notOPEC continues to pump, there are newsigns that Prime Minister Stephen Harper's dream for Canadaas an "emerging energy superpower" may be in trouble.

A report this week from Barclays showed Canadian production tumbling. The global giants with a stake in Canada's oil sands have stopped expansion plans and many have walked away.

Meanwhile, Alberta oil producers have threatened toputnew developments on hold until they see whetherRachel Notley's new NDP government gives them what they want.

Missing a crucial window

To add insult to injury, lowprices have emboldenedthe "dirty oil" lobby. There are new reports this week that the New York oil hub isrejectingpetroleum from Canada's "tarsands."

Alberta's oilsandsmay still contain some of the world's largest petroleum reserves, up there with Venezuela and Saudi Arabia, but there is an increasing danger that Canada has missed a crucial window to develop and extract those resources.

"There is no doubt about it, the price fall of the last several months has deterred investors away from expensive oil including U.S. shale, deep offshore and heavy oils," a Saudi Arabian official told the Financial Times lastmonth.

There are two reasons why the current glut has come at the worst possible time for the future of Canada's oilsands.

Last year's attempt to label Canadianoil as "dirty" came to nothing. But there are increasing signs, perhaps partly due to the feeling there is no shortage of oil, that the global mood is changing. The Keep It in the Ground movement is gathering steam.

The oil industry itself is already turning againstcoal. At the same time the world is just reaching the point when technology is creating economic alternatives wherefossil fuels used to be indispensable.

Canadian oilsandsdevelopment has always depended on the idea that the world was hungry for its production. That production depends on a huge investment, not just in extraction and processing, which is more costly than conventional liquid oil. It also requires heavyinvestment in infrastructure, specificallypipelines, to get bitumen to world markets.

Stiffcompetition

Had global giants likeTotal, CNOOC and Norway's Statoilalready sunktheir investment into oilsands expansion before the current glut, if the pipelines had already been built while prices justified the investment, everything mighthave been different. That seems lesslikely now.

The longer OPEC keeps theworldflush with oil, the stronger the climate change lobby grows, the less likely theprivate sector will be willing to invest the billions it will take to make Canada's unconventional oil resources accessible.

And by the time oilprices finally begin to rise, advances ingreen technology, competitive now,will make it an evenstronger contender at each higher price level.

It will be a long time before the world can do without oil. And Alberta's bitumen will always be there if the world needs it.

But it is not at all clear that demand will ever again be strongenough to turnHarper's dream of Canada as anenergysuperpowerinto reality.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis

More analysisby Don Pittis