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Suncor has a major shift planned to focus on in situ oil sands production by 2040

Suncor has a major shift planned to focus on in situ oil sands production by 2040
Suncor has a major shift planned to focus on in situ oil sands production by 2040

Suncor Energy, a Canadian oil sands giant, announced on Tuesday that the majority of their bitumen production?by?2040 would be produced by steam-assisted extract technology. This announcement marks a structural shift in the company's business model and will lead to lower costs and greater cash flow.

Suncor produces 70% of its oil sands at large-scale operations in northern Alberta. Trucks and shovels extract the heavy, thick bitumen deposits, which are located?near the surface. The remaining 30% is from deeper deposits, which require steam technologies (also called in situ) to loosen the oil before it can be pumped up.

Rich Kruger, Suncor CEO, said that over the next 15-years, Suncor will change its production mix so that by 2040, 60% will come from oil sands in situ development and only 40% will be from mining. Suncor's Base Plant, which will be mostly depleted in the mid-2030s is expected to decline, and the company wants a lower-cost product.

Kruger stated that "all barrels aren't created equal." In situ mining produces two times more cash per barrel than today's mining.

Suncor's Firebag site is already its most profitable asset. It produces 245,000 barrels of oil per day with in situ technology. Suncor filed a regulatory request on Monday to increase the permitted capacity of the site from the existing limit, which is 368,000 barrels per day, to 700,000.

Suncor is expecting to be able, through debottlenecking projects and optimization, to increase Firebag's output to 275,000 barrels per day by 2028.

Kruger also said that the company has proposed a?development in situ, called Lewis. It is expected to generate 160,000 bpd. The project will be built in phases, according to Kruger, to correspond with the gradual depletion of the Base Plant Mine.

Suncor's Investor Day was eagerly anticipated by the market. They wanted to know how the company planned to replace the Base Plant production with a reliable bitumen supply.

The company previously?proposed a 225,000 bpd open-pit expansion of its oil sands operations, located next to the existing Base Plant. It is unclear whether a similar?project would be approved by Canadian?regulators.

Kruger stated on Tuesday that the company's newest estimate of reserves indicates it has 11 billion more barrels in reserves than originally estimated. This brings its total bitumen reserve to 30 billion. Suncor plans to increase its upstream production of about 100,000 barrels per day by 2028.

(source: Reuters)