25/12/22
Canada’s oil sands to demonstrate durability in 2026
Calgary, 22 December (Argus) — Canadian oil sands heavyweights will show
durability in 2026 with modest production gains in a lower oil price
environment, while tempting investors with bigger, longer-term plans at a time
of renewed interest in pipeline projects. Canadian Natural Resources (CNRL),
Cenovus, Suncor and Imperial Oil plan to pump out a combined 3.9mn b/d of oil
equivalent (boe/d) in 2026, with 75pc of that focused on Alberta's oil sands
region. Production gains among the Calgary-based firms will be 1-4pc, with CNRL
and Cenovus leading the charge after sizeable acquisitions but also internal
growth that has been years in the making. CNRL will push output to a record
1.6mn boe/d across 2026 after becoming sole owner in the 315,000 Albian oil
sands mines in Alberta following an asset swap with Shell. The additional
bitumen production also simplifies operations for the country's largest oil
producer, which can now share trucks and personnel across its oil sands mines,
which also includes its fully owned Horizon project. For its part, Horizon
skipped a turnaround in 2025 to add 28,000 b/d of production, part of a growing
theme of trimming downtime in the oil sands. Meanwhile, Cenovus seems poised to
be the second Canadian operator to surpass 1mn boe/d with the upper end of its
2026 guidance just 15,000 boe/d shy of that mark. Boosted by two major
acquisitions of cross-town rivals and sizeable organic growth, Cenovus will have
doubled production since 2020 when output stood at 471,000 boe/d. It closed on
its C$8.6bn ($6.1bn) purchase of MEG Energy in November to bring another 110,000
b/d into its fold, with plans to grow that to 150,000 b/d by 2028. Cenovus five
years ago swallowed Husky Energy in a deal to increase its downstream and
upstream exposure in Canada and abroad. And the company recently completed a
three-year growth investment cycle and expects roughly 100,000 b/d of new
production, also by 2028, at Sunrise, Lloydminster and West White Rose in
Atlantic Canada combined. Capital spending for the four largest oil sands
producers will climb to $14bn in 2026, up by 5pc from 2025, led by CNRL and
Cenovus eyeing future growth. Endurance runners The production and spending
plans come against a backdrop of global oversupply, highlighting oil sands
operators' ability to not only weather, but grow, in a lower oil price
environment with their suite of long-life, low-decline assets. Cenovus said its
oil sands operating costs will be only $9/bl in 2026, while CNRL in another
metric reports its corporate breakeven, including dividends, is just above
$40/bl. In other words, oil sands producers would still have breathing space
should WTI fall to the $51/bl predicted by the US Energy Information
Administration in 2026 . But beyond 2026, an export pipeline capacity crunch is
forecast to unfold from the third quarter of 2028 and that could put pressure on
domestic prices, according to US bank TD Cowen. Trans Mountain and Enbridge plan
for expansions to come on line in mid-to-late 2027, delaying the potential
bottleneck by a year. Operators across the basin may be eyeing more growth but
may not be ready to accelerate those plans until confidence grows on takeaway
capacity. Acquisitions of producing assets may offer more assurance of that.
"It's easier to grow by buying. If you grow organically, you pull that egress
time forward," TD Cowen's managing director of institutional equity research,
Menno Hulshof, said. CNRL has also outlined several projects it may pursue in
the longer term, with front-end work due to start in 2026, potentially to unlock
up to 260,000 b/d of new capacity between three oil sands projects. Significant
output could come on line from 2030, and Alberta's recently proposed 1mn b/d
pipeline to the Pacific will be key to an investment revival in the province. By
Brett Holmes Oil sands capex guidance ($bn) 2026 2025 ±% 2026/25 CNRL 4.6 4.2 9
Cenovus 3.7 3.5 7 Suncor 4.1 4.2 -2 Imperial Oil 1.5 1.4 5 — company budgets Oil
sands production guidance (boe/d) Oil sands Other Total ±% 2026/25 CNRL 867,500
752,500 1,620,000 3 Cenovus 767,500 197,500 965,000 4 Suncor 797,500 57,500
855,000 1 Imperial Oil 450,500 0 450,500 4 — company 2026 budgets Send comments
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