Press Release
Report: Tar Sands Producers Face a Growing ‘Constellation of Risks’ as Public Opposition Hits Industry’s Bottom Line $31 Billion in Lost Revenues to Date;
Tar Sands Expansion Unlikely to Proceed as Protests Mount
WASHINGTON, Oct. 29, 2014 — A new report by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) and Oil Change International quantifies for the first time the financial and carbon impact of public opposition to pipelines and other expanded investment in tar sands production.
The report, “Material Risks: How Public Accountability Is Slowing Tar Sands Development,” presents market analysis and industry data to support its estimates on lost sales revenue to the tar sands industry as public opposition creates delays and project cancellations. The report also describes other market forces that are putting tar sand developers at a growing disadvantage.
The report puts tar sands development lost revenue at $30.9 billion from 2010 through 2013, in part from the changing North American oil market but largely because of a fierce grassroots movement against tar sands development. The report attributes 55 percent of the lost revenue, or $17 billion, to citizen protests against pipelines and tar sands.
“Tar sands producers face a new kind of risk from growing public opposition,” said Tom Sanzillo, Director of Finance at IEEFA, and one of the lead authors on the report. “This opposition has achieved a permanent presence as public sentiment evolves and as the influence of organizations opposed to tar sands production grows.” “They have a deep reservoir of committed talent from all walks of life: High-profile billionaires and regular workaday folks. It’s a group that is very well-schooled in the use of public-accountability tools, and a group that is right also in its criticism of the questionable finances behind tar sands development.”
Steve Kretzmann, Executive Director of Oil Change International, said, “Industry officials never anticipated the level and intensity of public opposition to their massive build-out plans. Public opposition has caused government and its administrative agencies to take a second and third look. Legal and other challenges are raising new issues related to environmental protection, indigenous rights and the disruptive impact of new pipeline proposals.”
“Protests against pipelines are keeping carbon in the ground, and changing the bottom line for the tar sands industry. Business as usual for Big Oil – particularly in the tar sands – is over.” Kretzmann said. A significant segment of opposition, the report notes, is from First Nations in Canada, which is raising sovereignty claims and environmental challenges.
Among the report’s findings:
The report also explores how smaller tar sands producers are having trouble accessing capital markets, how the industry is increasing capital spending even as it faces declining cash flows, weak revenue expectations, rising production costs and tight margins.
“Many tar sand producers are moving forward with large investments during a time of increasing financial uncertainty,” Sanzillo said. “ One or two of these factors would be manageable, but taken together they call into question the viability of these projects.”
The report can be found at: www.ieefa.org/report-material-risks.
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NT3
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