Wednesday, February 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Conference Board Of Canada: No Quick Bounce Back From Crude Downturn This Time

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2015 10:51 AM

    CALGARY — The Conference Board of Canada delivered bad news Wednesday for those hoping that the latest crude oil downturn will create only short-term pain.

    The Ottawa-based think-tank predicts that Canada's oil industry will see a 37 per cent drop in revenues, a pre-tax loss of $3 billion and the 8,000 fewer jobs this year compared with 2014.

    And the industry is unlikely to bounce back as quickly this time as it did after the last major drop in 2008 and 2009, it said in a report published Wednesday.

    Crude prices saw a much more drastic drop the last time around — touching records above US$140 a barrel and lows around US$33 in a half-year span — but by 2011, were back above US$100.

    The U.S. crude benchmark now sits below US$48 a barrel, compared with US$107 last June.

    "This is a new oil market," Conference Board economist Mike Shaw said in an interview.

    But he said it's not the "end of the world."

    "I know it looks rough right now but hopefully by the end of 2015, we start to see prices back towards $60 and maybe we start to see the light at the end of the tunnel."

    Over the Conference Board's outlook through 2019, US$80 oil is the best it gets. The main reason is fracking technology that has helped unleash huge crude volumes from U.S. shale formations — a big contributor to the current slump."

    "The period of triple-digit oil has passed for now. With the technological genie of horizontal drilling and multi-stage fracturing forever out of the bottle, the U.S. industry will be able to respond quickly and increase production if prices reach US$80 a barrel again, putting a hard cap on prices," the Conference Board said in its report.

    The outlook through 2019 is about US$30 below what the board had forecast during the first quarter of 2014. 

    The $56 billion invested in 2014 "may prove to be the high-water mark for oil spending in Canada," the report said. Spending is expected to ring in at $44 billion this year and $40 billion next year, with a moderate recovery in 2017.

    Many new oilsands projects aren't economically feasible at today's prices. Break-even costs for projects that extract bitumen by injecting steam underground are between US$60 to US$80 a barrel. For a new open-pit mining project, it's US$90 to US$100 a barrel.

    However, oilsands projects take a long time to get up and running and billions have already been sunk into some that are underway. That means overall production is expected to increase to 3.8 million barrels per day this year from 3.5 million barrels a day last year as greater oilsands output offsets drops elsewhere.

    The oilsands will continue to grow, just at a slower pace than before. And that's necessarily not a bad thing, said Shaw.

    "It means really that we're going to see marginal players that just don't go ahead anymore. It's going to be a focus on the best assets," he said.

    "It's not going to be a rush in anymore. You're going to see companies that take their time and really stage things out."

    Follow @LaurenKrugel on Twitter

    MORE National ARTICLES

    BC Ferries Commissioner Proposes Fare Hike Of 1.9 Per Cent A Year For 4 Years

    BC Ferries Commissioner Proposes Fare Hike Of 1.9 Per Cent A Year For 4 Years
    VICTORIA — The commissioner of BC Ferries has proposed fare increases capped at 1.9 per cent for four years — from April 2016 to March 2020.

    BC Ferries Commissioner Proposes Fare Hike Of 1.9 Per Cent A Year For 4 Years

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Hoped Attack Would Help 'Brothers' In Afghanistan

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Hoped Attack Would Help 'Brothers' In Afghanistan
    The trial for John Nuttall and Amanda Korody is listening to audio secretly recorded by police on July 1, 2013, after the couple planted homemade pressure-cooker bombs on the legislature lawn.

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Hoped Attack Would Help 'Brothers' In Afghanistan

    19 Killed In Tunisia Museum Attack, Including 17 Foreign Tourist

    19 Killed In Tunisia Museum Attack, Including 17 Foreign Tourist
    At least 19 people, including 17 tourists, were killed and over 20 others injured when gunmen attacked a museum in Tunisia's parliament complex here on Wednesday, according to media reports. Two of the terrorists were later killed.

    19 Killed In Tunisia Museum Attack, Including 17 Foreign Tourist

    Indian-origin Man Hardeep Sandhu Convicted Of Brutal Rape And Brick Attack On Woman in Britain

    Indian-origin Man Hardeep Sandhu Convicted Of Brutal Rape And Brick Attack On Woman in Britain
    Hardeep Sandhu, 39, was found guilty by a jury of rape and injuring with the intention of committing grievous bodily harm to the victim, who was a prostitute at the time, the Derby Telegraph reported.

    Indian-origin Man Hardeep Sandhu Convicted Of Brutal Rape And Brick Attack On Woman in Britain

    Feds Watching Housing Market Carefully, But No Plan To Cool It Down: Harper

    Feds Watching Housing Market Carefully, But No Plan To Cool It Down: Harper
    MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the federal government is keeping a careful watch on borrowing and lending tied to the country's hot housing market.

    Feds Watching Housing Market Carefully, But No Plan To Cool It Down: Harper

    Harper To Ask Parliament To Extend, Expand Mission Against Isil

    Harper To Ask Parliament To Extend, Expand Mission Against Isil
    MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he intends to ask Parliament next week to extend  and expand Canada's participation in the war against Islamic extremists in Iraq.

    Harper To Ask Parliament To Extend, Expand Mission Against Isil