Incentives for drilling unneeded so far, Dunderdale says - Action News
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Incentives for drilling unneeded so far, Dunderdale says

Premier Kathy Dunderdale says the Newfoundland and Labrador government has found it unnecessary to sweeten the pot for oil companies to encourage more exploration offshore.

N.L. premier notes 'deeper discussion' may soon be necessary to drive more exploration

Premier Kathy Dunderdale answers questions from reporters at Confederation Building on July 23. (CBC)

Premier Kathy Dunderdale says the Newfoundland and Labrador government has found it unnecessary to sweeten the pot for oil companies to encourage more exploration offshore.

"Were at a place now where were going into deeper water," Dunderdale told reporters earlier this week. "We had a crush with rigs, and so on. We havent been at a place yet that weve felt weve had to incentivize companies to drill."

Drilling is expensive in the Newfoundland offshore roughly $1 million a day.

Over the past two years, industry officials havehighlighted the need for incentivesto keep them exploring in the region.

Last summer, the province indicated that a decision on such a plan was imminent. Shawn Skinner, who was natural resources minister until his defeat in the October provincial election, said a decision would be finalized before last fall. But that didnt happen.

Dunderdale noted that talks are ongoing with the industry.

"We may be getting to a place where we have to have a deeper discussion about that," the premier told reporters.

Dunderdale stressed that the province has had good land sales in the offshore, saying the commitment of companies to explore has been strong.

The Henry Goodrich drill rig has been active in exploring in the Newfoundland offshore. (CBC )

The premier noted that "theres as much drilling going on as ever has gone on in this place."

While that statement may be accurate in recent years, it is not when past decades are taken into account.

There were just 23 exploration wells drilled in the Newfoundland offshore between 2000 and 2011 an average of about two per year.

Thats according to statistics provided by the Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board (C-NLOPB).

Another two to four wells are expected to be spudded in 2012.

By contrast, between 1972 and 1984, during an era of federal incentives for frontier exploration, there were 86 wells drilled.

Thats an average approaching seven per year.

The most recent discovery that led to a producing field was nearly three decades ago, in 1984.

Oil warning

The price of Brent crude is running roughly $20 a barrel below Newfoundland and Labrador government forecasts, leadingDunderdale to warnthat this years deficit could balloon by hundreds of millions.

The province is heavily dependent on oil revenuesroughly one out of every three dollars flowing into the treasury is courtesy of the non-renewable resource.

'We havent been at a place yet that weve felt weve had to incentivize companies to drill.' Premier Kathy Dunderdale

The Tory governments own 2007 energy plan recognized the importance of keeping exploration going.

"Without new exploration, there can be no new developments other than those already discovered," the plan noted.

"The keys to advancing our oil and gas sector are to encourage additional exploration activity and to manage the development of these resources so that investors can earn a fair return while the province maximizes the benefits it receives from these resources."

Recent exploration has met with success. Statoil discovered oil in 2009 while drilling in deep water 500 kilometres east of St. Johns.

Last month, the Norwegian companyannounced that there are up to 200 million barrelsof recoverable oil at its Mizzen prospect in the Flemish Pass.

That announcement marked a significant milestone for the Newfoundland industry. The deep-water Flemish Pass is an as-yet undeveloped area.

All producing fields to date are located in the shallower Jeanne dArc Basin.