The electrification of transportation is an existential threat to Alberta's oil industry but the energy war room @CDNEnergyCentre spends $30 million/year on vapid nonsense like this.
3/The next installment of our Sunday morning gibberish series from Milke.
I actually interviewed Norges, the Council on Ethics that advises Norges on this issue, and the Norwegian climate institute CICERO that prepared the report for the Council.
"...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.
1. Climate risk is front and centre for international investors.
2. Oil sands bitumen has a very high ghg emissions-intensity.
3. Why doesn't Alberta use a federal "green recovery" to help fund lowering that emissions-intensity instead of acting like the sky is falling?
2/Suncor CEO Mark Little has already proposed federal funding for an independent public agency to invest in commercializing the manufacture of materials (like carbon fibre) from bitumen.
Why not use "green recovery" $$ to fund that agency?
Materials, not combustion, eh?
3/Electrification of industry - like oil and gas production - is a key strategy for combatting the climate crisis and lower ghg emissions.
Why not use "green recovery" funding to electrify oil sands production? Are wind and solar feasible? What about small modular nukes?
2/The graphs below are from CERI's 2020 Oil Sands Production and Emissions Outlook. Many of the projects are low-cost operations. In 2019, when prices were modest, oil sands producers generated considerable free cash flow and net earnings were high.
3/"All of this adds up to a not-too-distant future when Alberta producers will chase a diminishing market with declining prices," the authors argue.
But there is a good argument to be made that the oil sands can compete in a shrinking heavy crude market.
2/Several Alberta companies - Summit Nanotech, E3 Metals - have developed technology to strip lithium from oil/gas produced water/briney water.
Summit's brilliant CEO, Amanda Hall, is a geophysicist who quit her job at CNRL to found her startup.
3/Alberta is a Canadian leader in carbon capture and sequestration. Old oil/gas reservoirs are perfect for long-term storage, according to my friend @MagHanna