Crown drilling rights sales down in three Western-most Canadian provinces
CALGARY – A key indicator of future oil and gas drilling activity in Western Canada is sliding lower as the industry deals with a lack of pipeline capacity, oil production curtailments and difficulty accessing capital markets.
Sales of Crown drilling rights — necessary for energy exploration on land where mineral rights are held by the province — have plunged in B-C, Alberta and Saskatchewan this year.
Richard Masson, an executive fellow with the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary, says the trend indicates a lack of enthusiasm to grow production in the oilpatch mainly due to insufficient pipeline space.
In Alberta, auctions are on track for a record low in 2019 with just $100-million raised and two sales left to go.