Markham Hislop Profile picture
Oct 2, 2020 8 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Time for a chat, AB

1/Suncor lays off 15% of workers

"...has been transforming itself in recent years to rely more on data/tech to improve its efficiency, such as using autonomous trucks...had anticipated these changes would lead to a smaller workforce."
calgaryherald.com/business/local…
2/@jkenney's corporate tax reductions were supposed to create jobs. Instead, Suncor appears to have used the tax savings to invest in digital tech that will destroy jobs, about 4,500 of them.

All the big oil and gas producers are doing the same.
3/This slide from Suncor's July 22, 2020 investor presentations shows that the drive for more efficiency and lower operating costs that lead to a smaller workforce is a deliberate management strategy.
4/Hundreds of millions allocated for "digital transformation" in 2019 alone. And, according to the experts I've interviewed, this is just the beginning.
5/Look at those breakevens. The company can survive at $25WTI and does very nicely, thank you, around $35WTI.

Suncor has no choice. It's seriously preparing for a future that is likely to feature lower prices for longer. If it wants to survive, this is the only strategy.
6/Of course, Suncor wants to do more than just survive. Investors want growth and growth in oil sands supply. I haven't found a supply forecast yet, but will post it to this thread when I do. Rest assured, it will show more production, not less.
7/I wrote about this trend in my first deep analysis, January 2018. Oil and gas boosters scoffed, said it would never happen.

Well, here it is and once again Alberta has been caught napping.

energi.media/deep-dives/tec…
8/This graph shows the royalties becoming a smaller and smaller percentage of ABGov revenue.

So, here's the important question: If oil and gas generate fewer and fewer jobs, and less and less royalties, what's the benefit to the owners, the people of Alberta?

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More from @politicalham

Feb 28
1/🧵Came across some old USA data that shows rise of new energy technology (ICE tractors + petroleum) and decline of old (animal power).

Smooth lines disguise plenty of market speed bumps, eg Great Depression starts in 1930.

Don't fret about EV sales. EVs = tractors
#Alberta Image
2/The first "tractors" were powered by steam. They date back to the early 1890s.

In Western Canada, they were uneconomic for plowing, but very good at breaking new farm land and powering the big threshing machines that toured farms during harvest.

Sales declined in 1920s. Image
3/Around 1908, first "big gas tractors" sold in the West.

Still uneconomic for 1/4 section farms, a few big commercial farms experimented with teams of them. Economics weren't much better than steam tractors.

Never caught on. Kinda like some of the early EVs that failed. Image
Read 9 tweets
Jan 16
1/From 2015 to 2019 @RachelNotley introduced some of the most forward-thinking energy and climate policies in North America.

She did it during a very difficult time of low oil and gas prices.

All the best in the next phase of your career, Ms Notley.
energi.media/markham-on-ene…
2/Notley signals that partial upgrading, petrochemicals will play bigger role in solving crude oil market access issue
energi.media/markham-on-ene…
3/Battle over Bill C69 demonstrates Notley govt support for Alberta oil and gas industry

energi.media/markham-on-ene…
Read 10 tweets
Jan 4
1/🧵The Death of King Oil

Will global oil demand peak in 2030 then decline quickly @IEA or peak in 2045 and decline slowly @OPEC?

The answer has significant implications for #Canada and oil-producing provinces, especially #Alberta.
#OOTT #ABleg #cdnpoli
share.transistor.fm/s/72e05025
2/Framing the peak oil demand discussion: Fast vs slow energy transition

International Energy Agency (IEA) = fast
*Peak oil demand by 2030, short plateau, rapid decline in 2 of 3 scenarios

OPEC = slow
*Peak oil demand in 2045, long plateau, slow decline
energi.media/energi-notes/w…
3/My hypothesis: IEA's modelling and analysis is more credible than OPEC's.

Several of OPEC's key assumptions (discussed later in this thread) are falling apart only a few months after the release of World Oil Outlook 2045.
opec.org/opec_web/en/pr…
Read 68 tweets
Aug 3, 2023
🧵 about @ABDanielleSmith's 7-month moratorium on new wind, solar projects.

Move roundly condemned by economists, clean energy groups.

The criticism is deserved, but there's more to this story, IMO.
#ABleg #ABpoli
alberta.ca/release.cfm?xI…
2/Min @neudorf_ab says moratorium a response to AB Utilities Commission (AUC) July 21 letter that raised 2 issues:

1. "development of power plants on high value agricultural lands"

2. "lack of mandatory reclamation security requirements for power plants"
alberta.ca/external/news/…
3/AB Electricity System Operator (AESO) also wrote a letter dated July 21 that supported "an inquiry into land use and reclamation issues..."
alberta.ca/external/news/…
Read 17 tweets
Jul 15, 2023
🧵 re the coming threat to the #Alberta economy courtesy of the global energy transition.

AB is out of step with rest of the world.

We think we have plenty of time. We don't.

@Alberta_UCP mandate letters illustrate why.
#OOTT #ABleg #cdnpoli
energi.media/energi-notes/w…
First, the big picture.

The common response among advanced nations to the energy transition + climate crisis is some version of this 3-pronged strategy:

1. Adopt clean energy supply (renewables, nuclear, hydrogen, batteries, geothermal, etc) Image
2. Adopt clean energy demand technology (EVs, heat pumps, etc)

ELECTRIFY. EVERYTHING.

What can't be electrified will switch to zero or low-emission fuel like hydrogen.

But it will be mostly electricity. Image
Read 24 tweets
May 4, 2023
1/🧵 debunking @Alberta_UCP's claim that @albertaNDP net-zero grid by 2035 plan will cost $87 billion and "you're going to pay for it!"

AESO: net-zero is an investment opportunity. Interview w/AESO VP markets Miranda Keating-Erickson.
#AlbertaElection2023
2/We were discussing a 2022 AESO study that was based upon AESO's 2021 20-year load forecast.

*Cost of between $44 billion and $52 billion depending on one of three scenarios
3/*"almost 90% of that comes from the supply side of the equation, so that is the turnover in actual production of electricity, which is all PRIVATE INVESTMENTS."
Read 17 tweets

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