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Suncor will present its plans for bitumen supplies in the long term this spring

Suncor will present its plans for bitumen supplies in the long term this spring
Suncor will present its plans for bitumen supplies in the long term this spring

Suncor Energy, a Canadian oil sands company, will present to the market options for long-term supply of bitumen this spring. This was announced by the chief executive on Wednesday.

Rich Kruger, speaking to analysts in a conference call, said that the bitumen question would be one of the main themes of the new long-term strategy the company will unveil on March 31.

Kruger stated, "We need to make it bold, ambitious, compelling and clear to maintain your interest and support."

Suncor, based in Calgary, has spent years researching options to ensure the supply of oil sands to its Base Plant upgrade facilities, located north of Fort McMurray.

Suncor's Base Plant is capable of producing 350,000 barrels a day. However, the mine at Base Plant will be depleted in the mid-2030s.

The company has suggested a 225,000 bpd open-pit oil-sands mine that would be adjacent to the?existing Base Plant.

It has not yet made a decision on whether to proceed with the project. It is also unclear if Canadian regulators would approve such a venture.

Suncor frames its upcoming Investor Day as the start of the next stage of what has already been a remarkable turnaround for the company.

Mark Little, Suncor's former CEO, resigned less than four years after a series of fatalities on the job and mishaps in operations that caused Suncor to lag behind its peers.

Kruger, the former CEO of Imperial Oil, was coaxed out of retirement to revive the company's flagging fortunes. Suncor has seen its performance improve dramatically since then. It announced Tuesday record financial results for the fourth quarter, including a production high of 909,000 barrels per day.

The company also reduced the WTI breakeven price per barrel by $10 since 2024. It relied on automation and staff reductions to meet its cost-cutting goals a year earlier than scheduled.

Suncor's investor day is awaited by the market to see what plans it has, especially in terms of potential capacity expansions and long-term capital investments, according to TD Cowen analyst Menno Hulshof.

We also hope for better visibility of how the portfolio and strategy (of Suncor) could evolve in the next five, ten or even fifteen years. Hulshof stated that this question remains important to investors. (Reporting and editing by Chris Reese in Calgary, Amanda Stephenson)

(source: Reuters)