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IHS Oil Sands 2025 Production Forecast: Growth of Nearly One Million Barrels During 2016-2025

Tuesday, 28 June 2016 | 00:00

IHS (NYSE: IHS), the leading global source for critical information and insight, has released its outlook for Canadian oil sands production through 2025. IHS expects continued oil sands production growth through the period, with oil sands growth entering a new phase driven primarily by the expansion of existing facilities with more attractive economics.

Oil sands production is forecast to grow by nearly one million barrels per day (mbd) by 2025—a significant pace of growth that, though lower than historical levels, will keep Canada among the largest sources of global oil supply growth. Canada is part of the “G-5+2”—a group of low-cost Middle East oil-producing countries (the Gulf-5) plus the United States and Canada. Collectively, they will account for most of the world’s oil supply growth.

An analysis of the new IHS oil sands production forecast by Kevin Birn, director for IHS Energy, is available at the IHS Energy Blog.

Construction of projects that started before the fall in oil prices (and where significant capital has already been invested) will be complete by 2018, after which construction activity could cease. The subsequent completion and then ramp up of these facilities will drive growth to 2020. IHS expects growth to continue to advance, with the substantial majority—more than 75 percent—of future activity coming from the expansion of existing facilities. Over three quarters of future activity is expected to be underpinned by such expansions.

“We expect oil sands producers to focus future investments in the coming years onto their most economic projects—which we expect to be expansions of existing facilities,” said Birn, who heads the IHS Oil Sands Dialogue. “Expansions of existing facilities are better understood, quicker to first oil and lower cost to construct. It is less risk at a lower cost.

“As we saw with tight oil producers, when prices collapsed, they focused their activity on the most productive areas. We expect a similar experience to play out in the Canadian oil sands. However, given the nature of the long lead times, we expect this will play out over the coming decade.”

An additional factor supporting future oil sands growth is the lack of production declines from existing oil sands projects. If oil sands facilities are maintained, their production levels do not decline, which is unique compared to other types of oil production globally. This means that each investment in new oil production results in net growth.
Source: IHS

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