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Drilling and service rigs facing an existential crisis

CAODC is disappointed and frustrated with the federal government鈥檚 decision on Bill C-69
Alliance Drilling Rig 3 southwest of Torquay
This is Alliance Drilling Rig 3, when it was working southwest of Torquay last winter. Despite the Flat Lake play being a key focus for Crescent Point, it has dramatically scaled back its drilling activity in the area this January. There are three rigs working in the general area as of Jan. 15, with just working in this township, 1-12-W2. In previous January's, the company had close to 10 rigs working in that township at a time.

Calgary 鈥撀燭he Canadian Association of Oilwell Drilling Contractors (CAODC) is disappointed and frustrated with the federal government鈥檚 decision not to accept all of the Senate鈥檚 amendments to C-69, as noted in a press release on June 13.

鈥淥ur members are facing an existential crisis and it鈥檚 unclear whether the federal government is ignorant or simply has a deliberate strategy to cause harm to the industry. This short-sighted decision will have lasting financial and social consequences for all Canadians,鈥 argued CAODC president and CEO, Mark Scholz.

Since 2014, the drilling and service rig sector has reduced the number of rigs in Canada by 600 or 40 per cent of the total rig fleet. Many of these rigs have been relocated to the United States or other international jurisdictions. The exit of this equipment has resulted in the permanent loss of billions in economic wealth and over 90,000 high paying jobs.

The enactment of C-69 will make building new energy projects nearly impossible, and will turn away billions more in investment and additional jobs in Canada. 鈥淭he federal government鈥檚 record on energy pipelines has been a complete failure,鈥 asserted Scholz.

The CAODC noted shortly after coming into power, the federal government vetoed Northern Gateway, a multibillion-dollar project with First Nation partnerships capable of transporting energy products to Asian markets. The government didn鈥檛 stand up to President Obama when he vetoed the Keystone XL pipeline, which would have expanded access to the United States market. Then, as a result of regulatory uncertainty, Energy East was cancelled, and an opportunity to allow Canadians better access to domestic energy products was frittered away. And finally, the government was forced into purchasing the Trans Mountain pipeline when a private investor became too exhausted with the political and regulatory circus, and unwillingness of the federal government to enforce its constitutional authority.

鈥淭he federal government quickly discards any economic headwinds as a function of volatile commodity prices, but that argument is growing old fast and doesn鈥檛 stand up to scrutiny. There is a simple reason why Canada is losing ground to the United States and that is market access and absent leadership. The government is handcuffing the most environmentally friendly oil and gas in the world, and opening the door for oil producing countries with poor human rights and environmental standards,鈥 stated Scholz.

CAODC predicts more equipment, companies, and crews will be relocated to the United States due to regulations like of C-69. 鈥淭he futures of the women, men, and families in our industry continue to be in jeopardy, and the federal government has made a bad situation much worse,鈥 said Scholz.

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