Second quarter highlights
- Combined oil sands production up 5% compared with second
quarter of 2014
- Oil sands per-unit operating cost improvement of 30% from
second quarter of 2014
- Gross cash proceeds of $3.3
billion from royalty and fee land business sale, received in
July
- Second quarter cash flow of $0.89
per share, excluding the impact of a one-time cash tax charge of
$0.31 per share
|
Production & financial summary
|
(For the period ended June 30)
Production (before royalties)
|
|
|
|
2015
Q2
|
|
|
2014
Q2
|
|
|
% change
|
Oil sands (bbls/d)
|
|
|
|
130,734
|
|
|
124,827
|
|
|
5
|
Conventional oil1
(bbls/d)
|
|
|
|
69,220
|
|
|
76,861
|
|
|
-10
|
Total oil (bbls/d)
|
|
|
|
199,954
|
|
|
201,688
|
|
|
-1
|
Natural gas (MMcf/d)
|
|
|
|
450
|
|
|
507
|
|
|
-11
|
Financial
($ millions, except per share
amounts)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flow2
|
|
|
|
477
|
|
|
1,189
|
|
|
-60
|
|
Per share diluted
|
|
|
|
0.58
|
|
|
1.57
|
|
|
|
Operating earnings2
|
|
|
|
151
|
|
|
473
|
|
|
-68
|
|
Per share diluted
|
|
|
|
0.18
|
|
|
0.62
|
|
|
|
Net earnings
|
|
|
|
126
|
|
|
615
|
|
|
-80
|
|
Per share diluted
|
|
|
|
0.15
|
|
|
0.81
|
|
|
|
Capital investment
|
|
|
|
357
|
|
|
686
|
|
|
-48
|
1 Includes natural gas liquids
(NGLs).
|
2 Cash flow and operating earnings are
non-GAAP measures as defined in the Advisory. See also the
earnings
reconciliation summary in the operating
earnings table.
|
Strategic update highlights
- On track to achieve approximately $280
million in 2015 cost reductions, 40% greater than initially
targeted
- Targeting between 300 and 400 job reductions in Calgary in second half of 2015
- Third quarter dividend reduction of 40%; temporary discount on
Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRIP) discontinued
- Priority focus on expanding existing oil sands projects but at
a more moderate pace of growth than in the past
- Investment in deferred oil sands expansions being considered
for 2016
"We are planning for West Texas Intermediate oil prices to be
approximately $65 per barrel through
2017," said Brian Ferguson, Cenovus
President & Chief Executive Officer. "But even at $50 per barrel, we believe we are well positioned
to be able to internally fund our reduced dividend as well as our
sustaining and growth capital without compromising our balance
sheet."
Strategic update
CALGARY, July 30, 2015 /CNW/ - Cenovus Energy Inc.
(TSX: CVE) (NYSE: CVE) continues to deliver strong operational
performance, with dependable oil sands production growth and
meaningful cost reductions. The company has undertaken a number of
significant initiatives to strengthen its financial resilience and
is now taking further steps intended to enhance value for
shareholders during this extended period of low oil prices and
market volatility. The company's actions are aimed at maintaining
its balance sheet and helping to ensure Cenovus is operating with
the greatest efficiency. In addition, Cenovus has adjusted its
previous capital investment strategy and plans to take a more
moderate approach to the growth of its oil sands assets.
Cenovus has already delivered on a number of its 2015
commitments, including reducing capital and discretionary spending,
achieving meaningful improvements in its operating, capital and
general and administrative (G&A) costs, making initial
workforce reductions, and crystallizing significant value for
shareholders by selling its royalty and fee land business at an
attractive price. Today, Cenovus is announcing further measures,
including an adjustment to its dividend and additional cost-cutting
initiatives, to further align the company with the economic
realities facing the oil and gas industry and help ensure it can
remain competitive with oil production across North America.
"We've taken a number of decisive steps to help ensure financial
resilience during a prolonged period of lower oil prices," said
Ferguson. "As a result of these initiatives and the operational
progress the company has made, we are now in an even stronger
position to remain cost competitive and potentially resume
investing in high-return growth projects."
Dividend update
With the expectation of a prolonged period of low oil prices and
the cash flow impact from the sale of its royalty and fee land
business, Cenovus is reducing its dividend by 40%. The Board of
Directors has declared a third quarter dividend of $0.16 per share, payable on September 30, 2015 to common shareholders of
record as of September 15, 2015.
Based on the July 29, 2015 closing
share price on the Toronto Stock Exchange of $18.61, this represents an annualized yield of
about 3.4%. Declaration of dividends is at the sole discretion of
the Board and will continue to be evaluated on a quarterly basis.
Over the long term, Cenovus intends to target a dividend payout
ratio of 20% to 25% of after-tax cash flows. With this dividend
reduction, the company is on track to be within its target range
for 2015.
Cenovus has discontinued the temporary discount on its Dividend
Reinvestment Plan (DRIP). The discount, which allowed shareholders
to reinvest their dividends in Cenovus common shares at 3% below
current market prices, was designed to conserve cash. Cenovus now
believes it has adequate liquidity to manage through the low oil
price environment, and the discount on the DRIP is no longer
required. While the DRIP will remain in place, in future, common
shares acquired under the DRIP will be purchased in the open
market, eliminating the dilution caused by the issuance of shares
from Treasury.
Cost reductions
Cenovus continues to make solid progress attacking cost structures
across the entire company to reduce its spend and create
sustainable cost improvements. The company previously announced a
target of $200 million in upstream
operating, capital and G&A cost savings for 2015, which were
largely achieved within the first six months of the year. As a
result, the company is increasing its cost-cutting expectation for
2015 to approximately $280 million,
40% higher than its initial target.
Part of the company's cost-cutting efforts has focused on
workforce. In February, Cenovus announced initial plans to reduce
its workforce by approximately 800 positions to align with capital
budget reductions for the year. The company has since identified
300 to 400 positions at its Calgary offices that are expected to be
eliminated before the end of 2015. These positions are no longer
required because of a decrease in work due to the continued low oil
price environment. Cenovus also intends to review the company's
compensation, benefits and time-off practices to ensure they align
with current and anticipated market conditions. The cost savings
associated with these additional workforce efficiencies are
expected to be at least $100 million
annually. Because the full impact of these workforce savings is
still being finalized and will likely be more evident in 2016, they
have not been included in the company's $280
million overall cost-reduction target for this year.
Cenovus is also planning for additional staff reductions at its
field operations in early 2016, as the company continues to
identify even greater workforce efficiencies. Details of these
additional reductions will be provided at a later date.
"Reducing the size of our talented workforce was not an easy
decision, but it's the right one," said Ferguson. "The new economic
reality for our industry includes low oil prices and competition
from light tight oil in the U.S. To help ensure our continued
success, we must adapt by reducing all of our costs and becoming as
efficient as possible."
Specific examples of cost savings already achieved or underway
this year include:
- The centralization of Cenovus's supply chain management team to
allow for greater standardization of supplies and services, a
reduction in the overall number of suppliers and more effective
management of the company's spend
- An innovation in the design of well pads at oil sands sites to
reduce the amount of area and infrastructure needed, which is
anticipated to result in significant sustained capital and
operating cost savings
- Improved drilling and completion processes
- Greater standardization of facility and infrastructure
design
- Reduced supplier costs for on-site pipeline installation
- Improvements to oil sands waste disposal and handling
processes
Of the company's targeted 2015 savings, about two-thirds are
expected to come from operating cost improvements with the
remainder related to reduced capital spending as well as lower
G&A expenses. Cenovus anticipates about half of these savings
will be sustainable over the long term.
More efficient organizational model
Cenovus also continues to make substantive progress with its
transition to a new organizational model, which will help the
company optimize its workflows, better utilize its people and
expertise and achieve efficiencies that will lead to sustainable
reductions in its overall cost structures. Under the new model,
teams are being organized by function and aligned with the
company's value chain as opposed to specific assets. Cenovus plans
to have its functional model structure in place by the end of the
year. The move is expected to result in additional workforce
efficiencies.
Cenovus is also realigning the structure of its Leadership Team
to better fit with the functional model. The planned retirements of
four Executive Vice-Presidents announced this May are proceeding as
expected. To minimize disruption to Cenovus's business and ensure
the transitions are orderly and managed, the retiring executives
will continue in varying capacities until the end of the first
quarter of 2016. As a result of Cenovus's strong focus on internal
succession planning, three of the vacancies on the Leadership Team
are being filled by internal candidates who are being promoted to
newly-restructured portfolios. In addition, an external search is
well underway for a President, Upstream Oil & Gas, who will be
responsible for the company's oil sands and conventional
operations. Cenovus expects to have that candidate identified by
September.
Disciplined capital allocation
Cenovus continues to focus on capital discipline, with its oil
sands assets remaining its top priority for capital allocation. The
company anticipates that 2015 capital spending will remain within
its previously announced guidance of $1.8
billion to $2.0 billion.
In its first five years of operations, the company generated a
compound annual production growth rate of 24% from its jointly
owned Foster Creek and Christina
Lake oil sands projects. In response to the company's
expectations for a continued low oil-price environment, Cenovus is
taking a more moderate and staged approach to expanding these
assets. Rather than pursuing multiple major construction projects
at the same time, the company will consider expanding existing
projects and developing emerging opportunities only when it
believes it can do so with the greatest efficiency and cost
savings, while generating the greatest potential return for
shareholders. The company is no longer targeting to achieve 500,000
barrels per day (bbls/d) of net oil production by 2021.
For the remainder of 2015, Cenovus's capital investment
priorities are:
- Sustaining existing oil sands production
- Completing the ongoing Foster Creek phase G expansion
- Completing the ongoing Christina
Lake optimization and phase F expansion
These projects remain on schedule and are expected to add
approximately 100,000 bbls/d of incremental gross production
capacity (50,000 bbls/d net) by the end of 2016, an increase of
about 25% to the company's current total crude oil production
volumes once the phases are at full operational capacity.
For 2016, Cenovus is considering investing capital in additional
expansion projects that were deferred earlier this year. With
considerable strength on its balance sheet and the sustained
reductions already achieved, the company has the financial
capability to resume those projects when it feels the timing is
right. Those investment decisions would be based on oil price
stability, continued balance sheet strength, the company's ongoing
cost-cutting success as well as fiscal and regulatory certainty.
Cenovus is allocating between $25 million
and $30 million for the remainder of 2015 to prepare for the
possibility of construction resuming on some of these projects next
year.
Once a decision is made to proceed, Cenovus's priority would be
to allocate capital to re-start construction at its deferred
Christina Lake phase G and Foster
Creek phase H expansions. The next priority would be to resume work
at the Narrows Lake oil sands project. These projects have the
ability to provide top-tier returns.
As with its oil sands operations, Cenovus is also taking a more
moderate approach to investing in its conventional oil
opportunities, with a focus on drilling projects that are
considered to be relatively low risk, with short production cycle
times and expected returns well in excess of the company's internal
hurdle rate of 15%. As part of this strategy, Cenovus is currently
directing capital to resume drilling at the company's tight oil
projects in southeast Alberta,
where it has experienced success in recent years, and at its
Weyburn enhanced oil recovery
project in Saskatchewan, which
benefits from strong netbacks and returns at current prices.
Cenovus has allocated $70 million,
activating three rigs, to resume its conventional drilling program
in the third quarter. The company has no plans to allocate
additional capital to its Pelican Lake or other conventional
projects this year.
Cenovus continues to believe in the long-term potential of its
emerging projects, including Telephone Lake and Grand Rapids. At this time though, plans for
development of these projects have been deferred, as the company
continues to work on new technology and process improvements that
are expected to further reduce capital and operating costs for
those assets.
The company expects to provide further clarity around its
capital investment plans when it releases its 2016 budget in
December.
Value creation & portfolio
management
During the quarter, Cenovus announced an agreement to sell Heritage
Royalty Limited Partnership (HRP), a wholly owned subsidiary
holding the company's royalty and fee land business. Included in
the agreement were associated royalties on third-party interest
volumes and on Cenovus's working interest production as well as a
Gross Overriding Royalty (GORR) on the company's Pelican Lake and
Weyburn production. The sale,
which closed on July 29, 2015,
generated gross cash proceeds of $3.3
billion, with an expected after-tax gain of approximately
$1.9 billion, to be recorded in the
third quarter. The proceeds further supplement Cenovus's strong
balance sheet and ongoing prudent management of its finances. On a
pro forma basis, including the proceeds from the sale of its
royalty and fee land business, Cenovus would have had a second
quarter net debt to capitalization ratio of 7%, with net debt to
adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and
amortization (EBITDA) of 0.3 times. The transaction provides the
company with the flexibility to invest in projects that offer the
greatest returns for shareholders over the near- and medium-term,
when oil prices are expected to remain low. At current oil and gas
prices, the transaction is expected to reduce Cenovus's future cash
flow by approximately $120 million
annually.
On June 4, 2015, Cenovus announced
an agreement to purchase a crude-by-rail trans-loading facility
located in Bruderheim, Alberta for
approximately $75 million. The
purchase supports the company's strategy of increasing
transportation options to maximize access to global markets where
it expects to capture higher prices for its oil. The transaction is
expected to close August 31, 2015,
subject to certain conditions.
Cenovus maintains an active portfolio management program,
continuously assessing both acquisition and divestiture
opportunities. As part of its strategy to add shareholder value,
the company continues to look for opportunities to crystallize
additional value from its conventional portfolio, as it did with
the HRP sale. Cenovus's conventional oil and natural gas assets
have historically provided reliable cash flow, well in excess of
their capital investment requirements, to fund the company's oil
sands expansions. As production from the oil sands assets grows and
they contribute increasing free cash flow, the strategic value of
some of its conventional assets has become less important than in
previous years.
While Cenovus continues to believe in the value of its
integrated strategy, which includes its refineries, the company has
no pending plans to invest in additional downstream assets. It
would consider a downstream acquisition only if it offers
compelling value and strategic fit, as was identified with the
recent Bruderheim rail facility
transaction.
Guidance updated
Cenovus has updated its 2015 full-year guidance to reflect actual
results for the first six months of the year and the company's
estimates for the third and fourth quarter. The updated guidance,
available at cenovus.com under "Investors," reflects Cenovus's
expectations for continued strong oil sands production, as well as
its improved outlook for upstream operating and G&A expenses
compared with the company's previous guidance. The outlook for cash
flow is also significantly improved, largely as a result of higher
anticipated oil prices, partially offset by the cash flow impact
from the sale of the company's royalty and fee land business. The
company's 2015 capital budget remains unchanged at $1.8 billion to $2.0 billion.
Second quarter results
Cenovus continued to deliver strong operating performance in the
second quarter, with incremental growth in its oil sands
production. The company also continues to benefit from its
integrated strategy, with operating cash flow from its jointly
owned U.S. refineries up by more than one-third compared with the
second quarter of 2014. In addition, the company continued to build
on its efforts to cut costs, achieving significantly lower
operating expenses compared with the second quarter of 2014. Cash
flow in the second quarter was lower than in the same period a year
earlier, largely as a result of the sharp drop in crude oil and
natural gas prices. Cash flow was also negatively impacted by an
acceleration of current tax payable in response to an increase in
Alberta's corporate income tax
rate.
Foster Creek and Christina Lake
are operating very well, with average combined oil sands production
of nearly 131,000 bbls/d net in the second quarter, a 5% increase
from the same period a year earlier. In July, combined production
averaged almost 150,000 bbls/d net, which is above the original
design capacity for both operations.
Foster Creek production grew to more than 58,000 bbls/d net in
the second quarter, a 3% increase from the same period of 2014,
despite a shutdown of the project in the latter half of the
quarter. In late May, a decision was made to undertake the
precautionary evacuation and orderly shutdown of operations at both
the Foster Creek and Athabasca
natural gas properties due to a forest fire that caused the closure
of the only access road to the projects. While the fire resulted in
no damage to the Foster Creek facilities, the 11-day outage reduced
second quarter oil sands production by approximately 10,500 bbls/d
net (about 2,600 bbls/d net on an annualized basis). Following the
restart of operations at Foster Creek, flush production contributed
to record daily volumes, which has helped offset some of the
production losses related to the shutdown. The flush production is
expected to taper off, and the company continues to expect
full-year production at Foster Creek will remain within its
previously announced guidance of 62,000 bbls/d to 68,000 bbls/d
net.
At Christina Lake, second
quarter production averaged more than 72,000 bbls/d net, up 6% from
the same period in 2014. Compared with the first quarter of 2015,
production declined approximately 4,000 bbls/d net due to unplanned
downtime, primarily because of a power outage. Cenovus expects
full-year production volumes at Christina
Lake to be above the midpoint of its previously announced
guidance of 67,000 bbls/d to 74,000 bbls/d net.
Oil sands operating expenses for the quarter declined
$4.64 per barrel (bbl), or 30%,
compared with the same period in 2014. Non-fuel per-unit operating
costs decreased due to higher production volumes, reduced workover
activity (primarily due to lower-cost electric submersible pump
changes) and lower repair and maintenance costs resulting from
improved scheduling of work. Foster Creek's second quarter non-fuel
operating expenses included approximately $2.6 million net, or $0.49/bbl, of incremental costs related to the
shutdown and restart of the facility due to the forest fire. Fuel
costs at Foster Creek and Christina
Lake declined as a result of reduced natural gas prices and
lower fuel consumption per barrel of production.
Impact of commodity prices and taxes
While crude oil benchmark prices strengthened compared with the
first quarter of 2015, they remain significantly weaker than a year
ago. In the second quarter, sales prices for Cenovus's crude oil
and natural gas were approximately 38% lower compared with the same
period in 2014. This contributed to a 42% decrease in upstream
operating cash flow, which was partially offset by a 36% increase
in operating cash flow from refining and marketing. Total operating
cash flow declined 28% to $928
million compared with the second quarter of 2014.
Cash flow was $477 million in the
second quarter, 60% lower than in the same period in 2014. In
addition to lower crude oil and natural gas prices, cash flow was
negatively impacted by higher than planned current income tax
expense of $315 million compared with
a tax recovery of $7 million in the
same period a year earlier. The higher tax expense was primarily
due to the acceleration in timing of income tax payable in response
to the recent increase in the Alberta corporate income tax rate from 10% to
12%, effective July 1, 2015.
After investing $357 million in
the second quarter, Cenovus had free cash flow of $120 million, down from $503 million in the same period a year
earlier.
Oil Projects
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Daily production1
|
(Before royalties)
(Mbbls/d)
|
|
2015
|
|
2014
|
|
2013
|
|
|
Q2
|
|
Q1
|
|
Full Year
|
|
Q4
|
|
Q3
|
|
Q2
|
|
Q1
|
|
Full Year
|
Oil sands
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Christina Lake
|
|
72
|
|
76
|
|
69
|
|
74
|
|
68
|
|
68
|
|
66
|
|
49
|
Foster Creek
|
|
58
|
|
68
|
|
59
|
|
68
|
|
57
|
|
57
|
|
55
|
|
53
|
Oil sands total
|
|
131
|
|
144
|
|
128
|
|
142
|
|
125
|
|
125
|
|
120
|
|
103
|
Conventional oil2
|
|
69
|
|
74
|
|
75
|
|
74
|
|
74
|
|
77
|
|
76
|
|
77
|
Total oil
|
|
200
|
|
218
|
|
203
|
|
216
|
|
199
|
|
202
|
|
197
|
|
179
|
1 Totals may not add due to
rounding.
|
2 Includes NGLs
production.
|
Oil sands
Cenovus has a substantial portfolio of oil sands assets in northern
Alberta with the potential to
provide decades of value creation. The two operations currently
producing, Christina Lake and
Foster Creek, use steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD), which
involves drilling into the reservoir and injecting steam at low
pressures to soften the thick oil, so it can be pumped to the
surface. Cenovus has approval for a third major oil sands project
at Narrows Lake. These projects are operated by Cenovus and jointly
owned with ConocoPhillips. Cenovus also has a significant
opportunity to deliver increased shareholder value over the long
term through production growth from several identified emerging
projects and additional future developments.
Christina
Lake
Production
- Production at Christina Lake
averaged 72,371 bbls/d net in the second quarter of 2015, 6% higher
than in the same period a year earlier, due to the startup of new
wells and improved plant and reservoir performance. In addition,
Christina Lake benefited in the
quarter from production at phase E, which reached design capacity
during the second quarter of 2014.
- The steam to oil ratio (SOR) was 1.7, an improvement from 1.8
in the second quarter of 2014.
- Operating costs at Christina
Lake were $8.32/bbl in the
second quarter, down 31% from $12.08/bbl in the same period of 2014. Just under
half of the reduction was due to reduced fuel costs as a result of
lower natural gas prices and a decrease in fuel consumption per
barrel of production.
- Non-fuel operating costs were $6.14/bbl, down 25% from $8.22/bbl in the second quarter of 2014. The
decrease was due to lower repair and maintenance costs resulting
from improved scheduling of work, reduced workover activity
(primarily due to lower-cost electric submersible pump changes) and
higher production volumes.
- The netback the company received for its Christina Lake oil production was $29.76/bbl in the second quarter, down 42% from
$51.66/bbl in the same period a year
earlier.
Expansions
- Cenovus's plant optimization project at Christina Lake is nearly complete. The project
is designed to add additional steam generating capacity and
optimize oil treating. Cenovus expects the optimization to ramp up
over a period of 12 months, beginning in the fourth quarter of
2015, with total gross production capacity at Christina Lake increasing to 160,000 bbls/d as
a result.
- The company is progressing construction at Christina Lake phase F. Central plant
construction is expected to be complete by the end of 2015. First
oil from this phase is expected in the second half of 2016. Phase G
central plant construction, which is currently on hold, is more
than one-third complete.
- Second quarter capital investment at Christina Lake was $161
million, compared with $183
million in the second quarter of 2014.
Foster Creek
Production
- Foster Creek production averaged 58,363 bbls/d net in the
second quarter, 3% higher than in the second quarter of 2014. The
increase was primarily due to additional production from phase F,
which continues to ramp up on schedule. The ramp-up is expected to
be complete in the first quarter of 2016, approximately 18 months
following first production. After nine months of ramp-up, phase F
contributed approximately 16,000 bbls/d gross in incremental
production in the second quarter and is currently producing almost
23,000 bbls/d gross. The phase F plant has a gross design capacity
of 30,000 bbls/d.
- The increase in second quarter production was partially offset
by the temporary shutdown of operations at Foster Creek in late May
and early June due to a nearby forest fire, resulting in the loss
of approximately 10,500 bbls/d net for the quarter.
- The SOR at Foster Creek was 2.3 in the second quarter, an
improvement from 2.6 in the same period a year earlier. The lower
SOR was due, in part, to incremental production from phase F in the
second quarter of 2015 compared with the same period a year earlier
when wells were being started up without any associated production.
The SOR also decreased as a result of improved conformance on new
well pairs. Foster Creek's SOR is expected to range between 2.6 and
3.0 while expansion phases F and G are ramping up. After ramp-up,
the SOR is expected to drop below 2.5.
- Operating costs at Foster Creek decreased 30% to $13.47/bbl compared with $19.38/bbl a year earlier. Approximately
one-third of the decrease was due to reduced fuel costs as a result
of lower natural gas prices and a decrease in fuel consumption per
barrel of production.
- Non-fuel operating costs fell 28% to $10.69/bbl in the second quarter compared with
$14.78/bbl in the same quarter last
year. The decrease was due to reduced workover activity (primarily
due to lower-cost electric submersible pump changes) and higher
production volumes.
- The netback the company received for its Foster Creek oil was
$23.77/bbl in the second quarter,
compared with $50.15/bbl in the same
period a year earlier.
Expansions
- Construction is continuing on phase G, which is anticipated to
begin producing in the first half of 2016. Plant construction at
phase G is approximately three-quarters complete. Phase H is
currently on hold.
- Second quarter capital investment at Foster Creek was
$73 million, compared with
$209 million in the second quarter of
2014, down 65%.
Narrows Lake
- Cenovus believes Narrows Lake has the potential to achieve
total production capacity of 130,000 bbls/d. Narrows Lake is
expected to be the industry's first project to use a solvent aided
process (SAP) on a commercial scale, combining butane with steam to
improve oil recovery.
- In the second quarter, the company spent approximately
$9 million at Narrows Lake, primarily
due to initial procurement commitments, continued engineering and
work to complete a camp facility that was already under
construction.
- The company plans to take advantage of the slower pace of
development to further optimize its engineering and execution
strategy to find the most economic way to develop the project.
Emerging projects
Grand
Rapids
- Cenovus continues to operate a SAGD pilot project at
Grand Rapids with two producing
well pairs. A third pilot well pair was drilled, completed and put
on steam circulation in the second quarter. Data from these well
pairs will be used to help determine the company's development plan
for Grand Rapids.
- The company has completed the dismantling and storage of an
existing SAGD facility that Cenovus purchased in 2014 and intends
to relocate to the Grand Rapids
site once the development plan has been finalized and a decision
made to start investing in a commercial project, subject to more
favourable conditions.
- Grand Rapids has regulatory
approval for total production capacity of 180,000 bbls/d.
Telephone Lake
- Cenovus continues to review development options for Telephone
Lake after receiving approval for an initial 90,000 bbls/d SAGD
project from the Alberta Energy Regulator in late 2014.
Conventional oil
Cenovus has tight oil opportunities in Alberta as well as the established
Weyburn operation in Saskatchewan that uses carbon dioxide
injection to enhance oil recovery. Cenovus also produces
conventional heavy oil from the Wabiskaw formation using polymer
and water floods at its 100%-owned Pelican Lake operation in
northern Alberta.
- Total conventional oil production was 69,220 bbls/d in the
second quarter, down 10% from 76,861 bbls/d in the same period a
year ago, primarily due to expected natural declines and the sale
of non-core assets in the third quarter of 2014 as well as capital
spending reductions resulting in no new drilling. The non-core
assets sold had production of approximately 3,000 bbls/d in the
second quarter of last year.
- Operating costs for Cenovus's conventional oil operations were
$15.58/bbl in the second quarter,
down 18% from $18.89/bbl in the same
period of 2014. The decrease was due, in part, to lower workover
costs and lower repair and maintenance expenses resulting from
improved scheduling of work. In addition, waste fluid handling and
trucking costs declined.
- The company invested $34 million
in its conventional oil assets in the second quarter, compared with
$149 million in the same period a
year earlier.
- Pelican Lake continues to deliver reliable production and cash
flow following the company's decision to significantly reduce
capital spending and optimize operations at the project. During the
second quarter, Pelican Lake produced an average of 25,053 bbls/d,
a slight improvement over the same quarter of 2014. Operating costs
at Pelican Lake were $15.35/bbl, a
28% reduction from the second quarter of 2014.
- The company plans to restart a portion of its conventional
drilling program in the third quarter of this year, directing
approximately $70 million toward the
program for the remainder of 2015. This program is focused on
Cenovus's tight oil assets in southern Alberta and the company's Weyburn enhanced oil recovery project in
Saskatchewan.
- With reduced production associated with the divestiture of
Cenovus's royalty and fee land business expected to be partially
offset by production from new drilling, the company anticipates
conventional oil volumes to be within its previously announced
guidance of between 66,000 bbls/d and 70,000 bbls/d for 2015.
Natural Gas
|
Daily production
|
(Before royalties)
(MMcf/d)
|
|
|
|
2015
|
|
2014
|
|
2013
|
|
|
|
|
Q2
|
|
Q1
|
|
Full
Year
|
|
Q4
|
|
Q3
|
|
Q2
|
|
Q1
|
|
Full
Year
|
Natural gas
|
|
|
|
450
|
|
462
|
|
488
|
|
479
|
|
489
|
|
507
|
|
476
|
|
529
|
Cenovus has a solid base of established, reliable natural gas
properties in Alberta. The company
has been managing these properties as financial assets, rather than
production assets, due to their ability to generate operating cash
flow well in excess of their ongoing capital investment
requirements.
- Natural gas production averaged 450 million cubic feet per day
(MMcf/d) in the second quarter, down 11% from 507 MMcf/d in the
same period in 2014.
- Cenovus anticipates continued declines in its natural gas
production in future quarters, as the company continues to direct
the majority of its capital investment to its crude oil
properties.
- The company invested $2 million
in these assets, compared with $5
million in the same quarter a year earlier.
- Cenovus's average realized sales price for natural gas,
including hedging, was $3.21 per
thousand cubic feet (Mcf), compared with $4.85/Mcf a year earlier.
- Natural gas use at Cenovus's operations is forecast to be about
180 MMcf/d in 2015.
Downstream
To capture the highest value for its oil, Cenovus takes an
integrated approach to production, transportation, marketing and
refining. The company is focused on finding new customers in
North America and around the world
where it expects to receive the best prices, and on ensuring it has
the ability to move oil to those customers. Cenovus is also working
to create a variety of oil blends that it expects will help
maximize its transportation and refining options.
Cenovus has ownership in the Wood River Refinery in Illinois and the Borger Refinery in
Texas. These refineries, which are
jointly-owned with the operator, Phillips 66, produce high-quality
end products like diesel, gasoline and jet fuel. On an integrated
basis, Cenovus's refining business provides an economic hedge
against heavy crude oil discounts to West Texas Intermediate
(WTI).
The company continues to support proposed pipelines to
Canada's east and west coasts as
well as to the U.S. to help secure additional shipping capacity for
its expected production growth. To complement this approach and
access markets not served by pipeline, the company has also been
pursuing a strategy to expand its capacity to transport oil by
rail.
Refining and marketing
Operations
- Cenovus's refineries processed an average of 441,000 bbls/d
gross of crude oil in the second quarter (96% utilization), down 5%
from 466,000 bbls/d gross (101% utilization) in the same period a
year ago. The decrease was largely the result of unplanned outages.
Together, the two refineries processed an average of 200,000 bbls/d
gross of heavy oil in the quarter, compared with 221,000 bbls/d
gross in the second quarter of 2014.
- The refineries produced an average of 462,000 bbls/d gross of
refined products in the second quarter, down 6% from 489,000 bbls/d
gross in the same quarter in 2014.
Financial
- Operating cash flow from refining and marketing was
$300 million in the second quarter,
36% higher than in the same period in 2014. The increase was
primarily due to improved margins on the sale of secondary products
such as coke and asphalt, the weakening of the Canadian dollar
relative to the U.S. dollar and an increase in average market crack
spreads.
- Higher operating cash flow was partially offset by the increase
in heavy crude oil feedstock costs for Cenovus's refineries,
relative to WTI, as the differential between the price of Canadian
heavy oil and the price of benchmark light crude oil narrowed. The
overall decrease in refined product output also had a negative
impact on operating cash flow.
- Cenovus's refining operating cash flow is calculated on a
first-in, first-out (FIFO) inventory accounting basis. Using the
last-in, first-out (LIFO) accounting method employed by most U.S.
refiners, Cenovus's operating cash flow from refining would have
been $101 million lower in the second
quarter, compared with $31 million
lower in the second quarter of 2014.
- Capital investment was $48
million in the second quarter, compared with $46 million a year earlier. As a result of cost
savings initiatives, 2015 capital spending is expected to be lower
than originally anticipated, which is reflected in Cenovus's
updated guidance.
Market access
- On average, Cenovus transported approximately 6,000 gross
bbls/d of crude oil by rail in the second quarter to markets in
Canada and the U.S., including
eight unit train shipments.
- As part of its strategy to create a portfolio of transportation
options designed to maximize market access and capture global
prices for its oil, Cenovus agreed in June to purchase Canexus
Corporation's rail trans-loading terminal at Bruderheim, Alberta for approximately
$75 million, subject to closing
adjustments. The transaction is expected to close August 31, 2015, subject to certain conditions.
The terminal adds strategic value for Cenovus due to its existing
pipeline connections to both the Cold
Lake and Access crude oil pipeline systems as well as its
links to the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National rail lines.
Cenovus currently transports production volumes from Foster Creek
to Bruderheim on the Cold Lake pipeline.
- Cenovus has 50,000 bbls/d of contracted capacity on Enbridge's
Flanagan South system, increasing to
75,000 bbls/d in 2018. Initial deliveries on Flanagan South, which provides additional
pipeline access to the U.S. Gulf Coast, began in December 2014.
- The company has firm service capacity of 11,500 bbls/d on the
existing Trans Mountain pipeline,
giving the company access to the West Coast.
- Cenovus has also committed to moving 200,000 bbls/d on
TransCanada's proposed Energy East pipeline, has additional
shipping capacity of 175,000 bbls/d on planned pipelines to the
West Coast and has 75,000 bbls/d of committed capacity on
TransCanada's proposed Keystone XL system.
Financial
Cash flow, earnings, capital investment, G&A and
debt ratios
- Cenovus generated $477 million in
cash flow in the second quarter, 60% less than in the same quarter
a year prior. The decrease was due, in part, to the sharp
year-over-year decline in crude oil and natural gas prices.
- Cash flow was also negatively impacted by higher than planned
current income tax expense of $315
million, compared with a tax recovery of $7 million in the same period of 2014. The higher
tax expense was primarily due to the acceleration in timing of
income tax payable in response to the recent increase in the
Alberta corporate income tax rate
from 10% to 12%, effective July 1,
2015.
- Operating cash flow was $928
million in the second quarter, 28% lower compared with the
second quarter of 2014.
- The company had operating cash flow, net of capital
expenditures, of $67 million from
crude oil production at its oil sands projects. Operating cash flow
in excess of capital invested was $187
million from conventional oil, $76
million from natural gas and $252
million from refining and marketing.
- Cenovus had operating earnings of $151
million in the second quarter, compared with operating
earnings of $473 million in the same
quarter in 2014. The decrease was primarily due to the decline in
cash flow as well as an exploration expense of $21 million in the second quarter of 2015,
compared with an exploration expense of $1
million in the same period of 2014. The decrease in
operating earnings was partially offset by a recovery of deferred
income tax and lower employee long-term incentive costs.
- Cenovus had net earnings of $126
million for the quarter, compared with net earnings of
$615 million in the second quarter of
2014. In addition to lower operating earnings, the decline was
related to higher unrealized risk management losses of $151 million, compared with $11 million in losses a year prior, and lower
non-operating unrealized foreign exchange gains of $99 million, compared with $177 million in gains in the previous year's
period. Net earnings were also impacted by a deferred income tax
recovery of $261 million, compared
with a deferred tax expense of $216
million in the second quarter of 2014.
- Capital investment was $357
million in the second quarter, a 48% decline from
$686 million in the second quarter of
2014, as the company reduced capital spending to conserve cash.
Almost three-quarters of the investment was at the company's oil
sands operations, as it progressed expansion phases at Christina Lake and Foster Creek.
- G&A expenses were $73
million, 28% lower than in the second quarter of 2014. The
decrease was primarily due to lower employee long-term incentive
costs. Reductions in discretionary spending and workforce also
contributed to the year-over-year improvement in G&A
expenses.
- Over the long term, Cenovus continues to target a debt to
capitalization ratio of between 30% and 40% and a debt to adjusted
EBITDA ratio of between 1.0 and 2.0 times. At June 30, 2015, the company's debt to
capitalization ratio was 35% and debt to adjusted EBITDA was 2.1
times, on a trailing 12-month basis. The net debt to capitalization
ratio was 28% and net debt to adjusted EBITDA was 1.5 times, on a
trailing 12-month basis. On a pro forma basis, including the
proceeds from the sale of its royalty and fee land business,
Cenovus would have had a second quarter net debt to capitalization
ratio of 7%, with EBITDA of 0.3 times.
Commodity price hedging
- In the second quarter, Cenovus added Brent fixed-price hedges
for July to September of 7,000 bbls/d at an average price of
US$61.41/bbl and 25,000 bbls/d at an
average price of C$80.76/bbl. In
addition, Cenovus added Brent fixed-price hedges for October to
December of 17,000 bbls/d at an average price of US$67.41/bbl and 8,000 bbls/d at an average price
of C$82.59/bbl.
- For the first half of 2016, Cenovus added Brent fixed-price
contracts of 9,000 bbls/d at an average price of US$69.63/bbl and 6,000 bbls/d at an average price
of C$84.44/bbl. For the full-year
2016, Cenovus added Brent fixed-price hedges of 6,000 bbls/d at an
average price of US$67.71/bbl.
- Cenovus had a realized after-tax hedging gain of $32 million in the second quarter, as the
company's contract prices exceeded the average benchmark price. The
company had unrealized after-tax hedging losses of $106 million in the quarter, primarily due to the
realization of settled positions and increases in forward market
prices.
- Cenovus received an average realized price, including hedging,
of $51.23/bbl for its oil in the
second quarter. This compares to an average realized price,
including hedging, of $78.39/bbl in
the second quarter of 2014. The average realized price for natural
gas, including hedging, was $3.21/Mcf, compared with $4.85/Mcf a year ago.
|
Operating earnings1
|
(For the period ended June 30)
($ millions, except per share
amounts)
|
|
|
|
2015
Q2
|
|
|
2014
Q2
|
Earnings (loss) before income
tax
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Add back (deduct):
|
|
|
|
180
|
|
|
824
|
|
Unrealized risk management (gains)
losses2
|
|
|
|
151
|
|
|
11
|
|
Non-operating unrealized foreign exchange (gains)
losses3
|
|
|
|
(99)
|
|
|
(177)
|
|
(Gains) losses on divestiture of
assets
|
|
|
|
-
|
|
|
(20)
|
Operating earnings (loss), before income
tax
|
|
|
|
232
|
|
|
638
|
|
Income tax expense (recovery)
|
|
|
|
81
|
|
|
165
|
Operating earnings (loss)
|
|
|
|
151
|
|
|
473
|
1 Operating earnings is a non-GAAP measure
as defined in the Advisory.
|
2 The unrealized risk management (gains)
losses include the reversal of unrealized (gains) losses
recognized
in prior periods.
|
3 Includes unrealized foreign exchange
(gains) losses on translation of U.S. dollar denominated notes
issued
from Canada and foreign exchange (gains)
losses on settlement of intercompany
transactions.
|
Achievements and
recognitions
Cenovus had its best safety performance ever during the first
six months of 2015, with a total recordable injury frequency (TRIF)
of 0.37, down 57% from the same period in 2014. In the second
quarter, the TRIF was down 67% from the same period the previous
year.
In June 2015, Cenovus was named
one of the Top 50 Socially Responsible Corporations in Canada by Maclean's magazine and
Sustainalytics for the fourth year in a row. The company was also
recognized by Corporate Knights magazine as one of the 2015 Best 50
Corporate Citizens in Canada for
the fifth consecutive year. In addition, Cenovus was included in
the Euronext Vigeo World 120 Index for the second year. The index
recognizes the top 120 companies globally for their high degree of
control of corporate responsibility risk and contributions to
sustainable development. Cenovus released its 2014 corporate
responsibility report in June, which can be found on
cenovus.com.
Conference Call Today
9 a.m. Mountain Time (11 a.m. Eastern
Time)
Cenovus will host a conference call today, July 30,
2015, starting at 9 a.m. MT (11 a.m. ET). To participate,
please dial 888-231-8191 (toll-free in North America) or
647-427-7450 approximately 10 minutes prior to the conference call.
A live audio webcast of the conference call will also be available
via cenovus.com. The webcast will be archived for approximately 90
days.
|
ADVISORY
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Basis of Presentation Cenovus reports
financial results in Canadian dollars and presents production
volumes on a net to Cenovus before royalties basis, unless
otherwise stated. Cenovus prepares its financial statements in
accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards
(IFRS).
Non-GAAP Measures This news release contains
references to non-GAAP measures as follows:
- Operating cash flow is defined as revenues, less purchased
product, transportation and blending, operating expenses,
production and mineral taxes plus realized gains, less realized
losses on risk management activities and is used to provide a
consistent measure of the cash generating performance of the
company's assets for comparability of Cenovus's underlying
financial performance between periods. Items within the Corporate
and Eliminations segment are excluded from the calculation of
operating cash flow.
- Cash flow is defined as cash from operating activities
excluding net change in other assets and liabilities and net change
in non-cash working capital, both of which are defined on the
Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows in Cenovus's interim and
annual Consolidated Financial Statements. Cash flow is a measure
commonly used in the oil and gas industry to assist in measuring a
company's ability to finance its capital programs and meet its
financial obligations.
- Free cash flow is defined as cash flow less capital
investment.
- Operating earnings is used to provide a consistent measure of
the comparability of the company's underlying financial performance
between periods by removing non-operating items. Operating earnings
is defined as earnings before income tax excluding gain (loss) on
discontinuance, gain on bargain purchase, unrealized risk
management gains (losses) on derivative instruments, unrealized
foreign exchange gains (losses) on translation of U.S. dollar
denominated notes issued from Canada, foreign exchange gains (losses) on
settlement of intercompany transactions, gains (losses) on
divestiture of assets, less income taxes on operating earnings
(loss) before tax, excluding the effect of changes in statutory
income tax rates.
- Debt to capitalization, net debt to capitalization, debt to
adjusted EBITDA and net debt to adjusted EBITDA are ratios that
management uses to steward the company's overall debt position as
measures of the company's overall financial strength. Debt is
defined as short-term borrowings and long-term debt, including the
current portion. Net debt is defined as debt net of cash and
cash equivalents. Capitalization is defined as debt plus
shareholders' equity. Net debt to capitalization is defined as net
debt divided by net debt plus shareholders' equity. Adjusted EBITDA
is defined as earnings before finance costs, interest income,
income tax expense, depreciation, depletion and amortization,
goodwill and asset impairments, unrealized gain or loss on risk
management, foreign exchange gains or losses, gains or losses on
divestiture of assets and other income and loss, calculated on a
trailing 12-month basis.
These measures do not have a standardized meaning as prescribed
by International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and therefore
are considered non-GAAP measures. These measures may not be
comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers. These
measures have been described and presented in this news release in
order to provide shareholders and potential investors with
additional information regarding Cenovus's liquidity and its
ability to generate funds to finance its operations. This
information should not be considered in isolation or as a
substitute for measures prepared in accordance with IFRS. For
further information, refer to Cenovus's second quarter 2015
Management's Discussion & Analysis (MD&A) available at
cenovus.com.
OIL AND GAS INFORMATION
Barrels of Oil Equivalent Certain natural
gas volumes have been converted to barrels of oil equivalent (BOE)
on the basis of six Mcf to one barrel (bbl). BOE may be misleading,
particularly if used in isolation. A conversion ratio of one bbl to
six Mcf is based on an energy equivalency conversion method
primarily applicable at the burner tip and does not represent value
equivalency at the wellhead. Given that the value ratio based on
the current price of crude oil compared to natural gas is
significantly different from the energy equivalency conversion
ratio of 6:1, utilizing a conversion on a 6:1 basis is not an
accurate reflection of value.
Netbacks reported in this news release are
calculated as set out in the Annual Information Form (AIF). Heavy
oil prices and transportation and blending costs exclude the costs
of purchased condensate, which is blended with heavy oil. For the
second quarter of 2015, the cost of condensate on a per barrel of
unblended crude oil basis was as follows: Christina Lake - $32.90 and Foster Creek - $29.82.
FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION
This document contains certain forward-looking statements and other
information (collectively "forward-looking information") about
Cenovus's current expectations, estimates and projections, made in
light of the company's experience and perception of historical
trends. Forward-looking information in this document is identified
by words such as "anticipate", "believe", "expect", "plan",
"forecast" or "F", "target", "projected", "future", "could",
"should", "focus", "proposed", "schedule", "potential", "capacity",
"may", "strategy", "priority", "outlook" or similar expressions and
includes suggestions of future outcomes, including statements
about: the strength of the company's position to support future
investment and delivery of value under various potential
conditions; adequacy of the company's liquidity to manage through
the current low-price environment; growth strategy and related
schedules, including priorities and focus; projections contained in
the company's updated 2015 guidance; forecast operating and
financial results; planned capital expenditures, capital investment
priorities and expected conditions for future capital investments;
project capacities; expected future production, including the
timing, stability or growth thereof; improving cost structures,
including relative to cost reduction targets, the expected timing,
sustainability and potential impacts of anticipated cost savings
and potential outcomes of the company's assessment of its workforce
and G&A requirements; the expected timing and potential impacts
of the transition to a new functional model; the long-term
potential of the company's emerging projects; expected impacts of
the disposition of Heritage Royalty Limited Partnership; expected
impacts and timeline for closing of the crude-by-rail trans-loading
facility acquisition; acquisition and disposition strategy;
forecast natural gas use at operations; expected SOR; expected
increase in production capacity through optimization activity;
potential for optimization of engineering and execution strategy,
including related impacts on capital efficiencies; operating cash
flow relative to ongoing capital investment requirements for
properties; expected future refining capacity; expected pipeline
capacity; broadening market access; the company's work on a variety
of oil blends, including potential related impact on transportation
and refining options; dividend plans and dividend strategy,
including with respect to the dividend reinvestment plan;
anticipated timelines for future regulatory, partner or internal
approvals; forecasted commodity prices; future use and development
of technology; targeted future debt to capitalization ratio and
debt to adjusted EBITDA; and projected shareholder value and total
shareholder return. Readers are cautioned not to place undue
reliance on forward-looking information as the company's actual
results may differ materially from those expressed or implied.
Developing forward-looking information involves reliance on a
number of assumptions and consideration of certain risks and
uncertainties, some of which are specific to Cenovus and others
that apply to the industry generally.
The factors or assumptions on which the forward-looking
information is based include: assumptions disclosed in Cenovus's
current guidance, available at cenovus.com; the company's projected
capital investment levels, the flexibility of the company's capital
spending plans and the associated source of funding; estimates of
quantities of oil, bitumen, natural gas and liquids from properties
and other sources not currently classified as proved; the company's
ability to obtain necessary regulatory and partner approvals and
closing of the crude-by-rail trans-loading facility acquisition;
the successful and timely implementation of capital projects or
stages thereof; the company's ability to generate sufficient cash
flow to meet its current and future obligations; and other risks
and uncertainties described from time to time in the filings we
make with securities regulatory authorities.
2015 guidance is based on an average diluted number of shares
outstanding of approximately 819 million. It assumes: Brent of
US$62.25/bbl, WTI of US$56.75/bbl; WCS of US$44.00/bbl; NYMEX of US$2.85/MMBtu; AECO of $2.65/GJ; Chicago 3-2-1 crack spread of US$18.50/bbl; and an exchange rate of
$0.81 US$/C$.
The risk factors and uncertainties that could cause Cenovus's
actual results to differ materially include: risks inherent to
completion of the company's crude-by-rail trans-loading facility
acquisition, including obtaining any necessary regulatory or other
third-party approvals and satisfying other closing conditions in
connection therewith; volatility of and assumptions regarding oil
and natural gas prices; the effectiveness of the company's risk
management program, including the impact of derivative financial
instruments, the success of the company's hedging strategies and
the sufficiency of its liquidity position; the accuracy of cost
estimates; fluctuations in commodity prices, currency and interest
rates; fluctuations in product supply and demand; market
competition, including from alternative energy sources; risks
inherent in Cenovus's marketing operations, including credit risks;
maintaining desirable ratios of debt to adjusted EBITDA, net debt
to adjusted EBITDA, debt to capitalization and net debt to
capitalization; ability to access various sources of debt and
equity capital, generally, and on terms acceptable to Cenovus;
changes in credit ratings applicable to Cenovus or any of its
securities; changes to Cenovus's dividend plans or strategy,
including the dividend reinvestment plan; accuracy of Cenovus's
reserves, resources and future production estimates; ability to
replace and expand oil and gas reserves; ability to maintain the
company's relationships with its partners and to successfully
manage and operate its integrated heavy oil business; reliability
of the company's assets; potential disruption or unexpected
technical difficulties in developing new products and manufacturing
processes; refining and marketing margins; potential failure of new
products to achieve acceptance in the market; unexpected cost
increases or technical difficulties in constructing or modifying
manufacturing or refining facilities; unexpected difficulties in
producing, transporting or refining of crude oil into petroleum and
chemical products; risks associated with technology and its
application to Cenovus's business; the timing and the costs of well
and pipeline construction; the company's ability to secure
adequate product transportation, including sufficient crude-by-rail
or other alternate transportation; changes in the regulatory
framework in any of the locations in which Cenovus operates,
including changes to the regulatory approval process and land-use
designations, royalty, tax, environmental, greenhouse gas, carbon
and other laws or regulations, or changes to the interpretation of
such laws and regulations, as adopted or proposed, the impact
thereof and the costs associated with compliance; the expected
impact and timing of various accounting pronouncements, rule
changes and standards on Cenovus's business, its financial results
and its consolidated financial statements; changes in the general
economic, market and business conditions; the political and
economic conditions in the countries in which Cenovus operates; the
occurrence of unexpected events such as war, terrorist threats and
the instability resulting therefrom; and risks associated with
existing and potential future lawsuits and regulatory actions
against Cenovus.
Readers are cautioned that the foregoing lists are not
exhaustive and are made as at the date hereof. For a full
discussion of Cenovus's material risk factors, see "Risk Factors"
in our AIF or Form 40-F for the year ended December 31, 2014 and "Risk Management" in our
current and annual Management's Discussion and Analysis (MD&A),
available on SEDAR at sedar.com, EDGAR at sec.gov and on the
company's website at cenovus.com.
TM denotes a trademark of Cenovus Energy Inc.
Cenovus Energy Inc.
Cenovus Energy Inc. is a Canadian integrated oil company. It is
committed to applying fresh, progressive thinking to safely and
responsibly unlock energy resources the world needs. Operations
include oil sands projects in northern Alberta, which use specialized methods to
drill and pump the oil to the surface, and established natural gas
and oil production in Alberta and
Saskatchewan. The company also has
50% ownership in two U.S. refineries. Cenovus shares trade under
the symbol CVE, and are listed on the Toronto and New
York stock exchanges. Its enterprise value is approximately
$20 billion. For more information,
visit cenovus.com.
Find Cenovus on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube and
Instagram.
SOURCE Cenovus Energy Inc.