Thank you
Good morning. My name is Peter Howard, and as the moderator indicated, I am the president and CEO of the Canadian Energy Research Institute.
Founded in 1975, the Canadian Energy Research Institute, or CERI, as we call it, is an independent, non-profit research institute specializing in the analysis of energy economics and related environmental policy issues in the energy production, transportation, and consumption sectors. Our mission is to provide relevant, independent, and objective economic research.
Members of the institute include the Government of Canada, the Government of Alberta, the University of Calgary, the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, and the Small Explorers and Producers Association of Canada.
On the oil and gas industry in Canada, the oil and gas component of the Canadian economy is historically focused on hydrocarbon production, pricing, royalties, and taxation. Success or failure is usually measured by levels of production, the profitability of hydrocarbon exploration and production companies, the royalty, and taxation levels of government. Often absent from this group of companies are the tens of thousands of workers that support the efforts of the E and P sector, namely the oil and gas service sector, or the OGS.
My brief this morning will focus on the economic impacts of the oil and gas service sector and its relationship to the Canadian economy.
Before I start I would like to go over a few definitions. The oil and gas producers are the corporate entities whose business it is to explore and develop hydrocarbon resources in the form of oil, oil sands, natural gas--including conventional, tight, and shale--and natural gas from coal, commonly referred to as coalbed methane.
Oil sands operators are a subset of the oil and gas producers who explore and develop oil sands resources. These companies may or may not have involvement in conventional oil and gas exploration.
The natural gas industry is a subset of the oil and gas industry, which covers all activities related to exploration, development, and transportation of just natural gas from the resource pools to the city gate meter stations. This includes exploration, drilling, production, gathering, processing, and pipeline transportation. The report generated by America’s Natural Gas Alliance, ANGA, in 2008, whereby it states that natural gas activities support more than 600,000 jobs and contribute $100 billion to Canada’s GDP, is an example of this portion of the oil and gas industry.
The oil and gas service sector is made up of the companies that offer products and services employed in direct support of oil and gas exploration and production activities for the oil and gas producers. These activities include exploration, drilling, completion, production, construction, processing, transportation, logistics, manufacturing, maintenance, and fabrication. This activity covers all conventional hydrocarbons, including oil, gas, and coalbed methane; all unconventional activities, including tight gas and shale gas; and all oil sands developments, but it does not include gas transmission in the form of pipelines.
On the oil and gas service sector, wells drilled, production rates, revenues, royalties, and taxes are replaced by words like casing, production strings, tubing strings, bits, wellheads, rig move, rig days, rig release, packers, plugs, fracing, cementing, coring, testing, and abandonment. Engineers, landmen, geologists, and geophysicists are replaced by surveyors, rig crew, drilling supervisor, trucker, loader operator, jug hound, mud man, snubber, well tester, tool push, well site geologist, and safety supervisor.