Wildfires in the west and northwest of Alberta have negatively impacted natural gas production by nearly 3 Bcf/d (>15%) over this past weekend as some production and gas processing sites were forced to shut down. As a result, AECO prices jumped above C$2.50/GJ ($1.87/MMBtu) at the start of this week, a gain of 38% over the end of the prior week. Time to full restoration of production remains uncertain, but no damage has been reported to wellhead or gas processing sites. Near real time flow indicators point to more than half of lost production being restored heading into the middle of this week. Natural gas exports took a brief hit of 1.5 Bcf/d, but have since returned to near previous values. Price and production impacts appear to be transitory, and unlikely to change the near term price bearish mood affecting Canadian gas markets as storage remains well above year ago levels.
Featured Articles
Burning Down the House - Wildfires, Pipeline Maintenance Punish Western Canadian Gas Production
Western Canada’s natural gas production has been on a roll in the past couple of years, reaching a record 17.3 Bcf/d in 2022. Another year of strong growth was expected in 2023, but Mother Nature had other plans — as usual. First, a milder-than-average heating season left plenty of gas in storage, pushing natural gas prices lower across North America. Second, tinder-dry conditions in some of the best gas production areas in Alberta and British Columbia sparked what so far has been a very active wildfire season — and forced producers to curtail their gas output numerous times in May and June. From our early expectations for production growth of 1.2 to 1.4 Bcf/d this year, the impacts from wildfires and a healthy dose of pipeline maintenance has chopped our 2023 production growth outlook to just 0.4 Bcf/d. As we discuss in today’s RBN blog, this slowdown in growth is exactly the opposite of what’s needed to avoid a runup in prices. Strong production momentum will be required into 2024 and 2025 to deal with the startup of the LNG Canada export facility, ongoing Canadian gas demand growth and pipeline exports to the U.S.
Feelin' Good Again - For Canadian Producers, the Most Promising Natural Gas Price Outlook in Years
As the new heating season in North America gets under way, the natural gas sector in Canada, the U.S., and even globally, is experiencing a surge in gas prices to levels unseen in many years. In Canada and the U.S., you would have to go way back to 2008-09 to find the most recent instance of $5/MMBtu-plus gas heading into a heating season. As for the rest of the world, it has never experienced prices at the levels reported in the past few months — north of $30/MMBtu in some places. The big question, as always, is: where do we go from here? In today’s RBN blog, we review our 2021 pricing outlook for Canadian gas and discuss our forecast for 2022.
Get Me Out of Here, Part 2 - Western Canada's Natural Gas Production is Nearing All-Time Highs
Once consigned to a flat or declining profile, natural gas production in Western Canada has been increasing steadily since 2012, to the extent that it has now begun to stretch the ability of the existing pipeline network to the breaking point. Most striking is that this expansion in production has been taking place in an era of declining natural gas prices and weakening basis for Western Canada’s primary natural price marker, AECO, and rising and relentless competition from U.S. gas supplies in several of Canada’s key domestic and export markets. If the pricing, pipe egress and export situation has become so dire, why are producers still drilling for and pumping out even more natural gas? Today, we address this question in the second part of our series investigating Western Canada’s natural gas supply and demand balance.