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This One Change Would Make the Oilsands No Longer Worth Developing

This article originally appeared in Maclean's magazine and is republished here with permission.

It was reported recently that Exxon-Mobil will begin disclosing the degree to which its assets are exposed to future greenhouse gas policies. This risk is at the heart of what has become known as the carbon bubble, a term advanced by UK group Carbon Tracker, which suggests that assets may be over-valued as a result of not accounting for potential future limits on fossil fuel extraction imposed to fight climate change.

The so-called carbon bubble should be a concern to investors in oil sands stocks, and you only need to consider two numbers to understand why: 80 and 320. First, the number 80: oil sands producers and the Alberta government are quick to tell you that up to 80 per cent of the life-cycle emissions from oil sands occur from refining and combustion, not from extraction and upgrading.

That’s comforting, until you consider that this means that most of the carbon policy exposure for these projects comes from emissions-control policies and innovations far beyond the jurisdictions and markets in which oil sands companies operate.

Second, the number 320: when it was leaked that the Alberta government was considering a 40-40 approach (a requirement to reduce emissions intensity by 40 per cent, with a penalty for exceeding this limit of $40/tonne), the oil industry responded that governments acting this aggressively would create significant competitiveness concerns. Shell’s CEO Lorraine Mitchelmore, long a champion for carbon pricing policy, was quoted as saying that, “Alberta needs to be sure that it keeps the industry competitive,” while former Suncor CEO Rick George stated that, “it’s a bad idea to make companies uncompetitive.” 

Here’s the kicker: if an average cost of carbon of $16/tonne on 20 per cent of your emissions raises competitive concerns, it seems that investors should worry a great deal about risks to future returns from oil sands assets. Such a policy boils down to 320 pennies per tonne of life-cycle carbon emissions, hardly aggressive given the magnitude of global emissions reductions which will be required to meet Prime Minister Harper’s commitment to policies which keep global climate change below 2 degrees Celsius.

Reports by Carbon Tracker and others were part of what led me and my colleague Branko Boskovic to ask whether stringent carbon policies, if applied to all emissions associated with oil sands, would render new oil sands investments uneconomic. We started out with a model of an oil sands mine, tabulated the life-cycle emissions (for a mine, production emissions are about 36kg per barrel of bitumen produced, while total, life-cycle emissions are about 535kg per barrel as estimated by Jacobs and others), and applied carbon taxes first to production emissions, and then to the full emissions impact of the oil produced.

Sensitivity of oil sands mine rates of return to upstream and downstream carbon prices.

In the figure above, you can see some of the preliminary results of our analysis. Our base case is a mine with financial attributes similar to Suncor’s recently-approved Fort Hills mine. This project has a rate of return of 12.5 per cent assuming WTI prices of $90, a Canadian dollar exchange rate of 94 US cents, and a $15 differential between light and heavy oil at Edmonton, with Alberta’s existing policy in place.

In the top row of the figure above, you see what happens to those returns on investment as carbon prices on production increase—not so scary, even as carbon prices climb to $100/tonne of CO2. However, it’s when the number 80 starts to play a role that you really see where the risk comes from. Reading down every column, you see what happens to project returns as a greater share of the downstream (combustion and refining) carbon liability is paid for by the producer, most likely indirectly through lower oil prices resulting from demand-side carbon policy.

Even a $50/tonne carbon price presents a serious risk to the economic viability of this investment if, as will have to be the case if global emissions are to be reduced, these policies are applied to combustion emissions and consumers aren’t willing to simply pay the tax. The more consumers react to increased prices with reduced demand, the more detrimental carbon policies become for oil sands investments.

So, if you want to know where the risks to oil sand projects lie, they aren’t from the policies which are being considered for production emissions in Canada. They come from two numbers—the 80 per cent of emissions that occur once the oil is burned, and the concerns that executives appear to have with carbon emissions costs of as little as 320 pennies per tonne.

Image Credit: Alex MacLean via @grossmanmedia, used with permisson

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Another year of keeping a close watch
Here at The Narwhal, we don’t use profit, awards or pageviews to measure success. The thing that matters most is real-world impact — evidence that our reporting influenced citizens to hold power to account and pushed policymakers to do better.

And in 2024, our stories were raised in parliaments across the country and cited by citizens in their petitions and letters to politicians.

In Alberta, our reporting revealed Premier Danielle Smith made false statements about the controversial renewables pause. In Manitoba, we proved that officials failed to formally inspect a leaky pipeline for years. And our investigations on a leaked recording of TC Energy executives were called “the most important Canadian political story of the year.”

As the year draws to a close, we’d like to thank you for paying attention. And if you’re able to donate anything at all to help us keep doing this work in 2025 — which will bring a whole lot we can’t predict — thank you so very much.

Will you help us hold the powerful accountable in the year to come by giving what you can today?

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