Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Back To The Future: Is This Oil Downturn A Repeat Of The 1985 Crash?

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Nov, 2015 11:23 AM
    CALGARY — Thirty years ago, shoulder pads were all the rage, Molly Ringwald was a rising teen movie star and low oil prices were wreaking economic havoc.
     
    At least one of those will feel familiar to those working in the oil and gas industry these days.
     
    There's been talk of the current oil rout being a repeat of the price crash that began in 1985 and lasted about a decade, but a report released Thursday suggests there's reason to hope the doldrums won't last as long this time around.
     
    "This is not the worst price crash," said the paper's author, Robert Skinner, executive fellow at the University of Calgary's School of Public Policy.
     
    "It is not the deepest, nor the fastest nor yet the worst."
     
    According to the study, today's price collapse and the one from 30 years ago have one major thing in common: they were mostly driven by oversupply in the market rather than weak demand.
     
    Outside of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, the big factor nowadays is U.S. shale oil, whereas back then the focus was on rising supplies from Alaska, Mexico and the North Sea.
     
    But a big difference between the two crashes is that there was a lot more spare production capacity globally in the 1980s than there is today, meaning balance may be restored more quickly this time.
     
     
    "If any silver lining can be found in the roiling storm clouds of the current rout, it is that the pendulum could swing sharply back by decade's end," Skinner wrote in the report.
     
    "Natural production declines in old fields and investment cutbacks and cancellations around the world will eventually register in market balances once record inventories are drawn down."
     
    However, the report said the recovery will likely be "bumpy," unlike the steady rise in oil prices following the more recent 2008-2009 crash that was driven largely by the global financial crisis.
     
    Crude prices fell 65 per cent between June 2014 and August of this year. This week, the U.S. benchmark dipped below US$40 a barrel in intraday trading and settled at US$40.54 on Thursday.
     
    Oil declined 67 per cent between November 1985 and March 1986.
     
    In 2015, gross revenues in the Canadian oil and gas industry are expected to drop by $50 billion to $60 billion compared with 2014 and cash flow will fall to levels below those of 2000. That leads to layoffs, lower government revenues and reduced investment.
     
    And the oilsands industry is much more ingrained in the overall Canadian economy now than it was three decades ago, meaning the impact of the crash is much more widespread this time, said Skinner.
     
     
    Earlier this week, the Canadian Association of Oilwell Drilling Contractors said economic conditions are the worst they've been in a generation, with the number of active rigs in Western Canada at the same level they were in 1983.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Gives Municipalities $333 Million From Gas Tax To Fund Public Transit

    Ontario Gives Municipalities $333 Million From Gas Tax To Fund Public Transit
    Ontario generates about $2.4 billion a year from its 14.7 cents-a-litre tax on gasoline, and gives two-cents-a-litre to cities and towns to expand public transit.

    Ontario Gives Municipalities $333 Million From Gas Tax To Fund Public Transit

    Justin Trudeau Promises To Look Into 2008 RCMP Proposal To Tail Journalist

    Justin Trudeau Promises To Look Into 2008 RCMP Proposal To Tail Journalist
    rudeau says he believes a free and independent press is an essential part of a strong democracy.

    Justin Trudeau Promises To Look Into 2008 RCMP Proposal To Tail Journalist

    Harper Government Accused Of Leaving 'Bare Cupboard' For Liberals

    Harper Government Accused Of Leaving 'Bare Cupboard' For Liberals
    Treasury Board President Scott Brison says he's not surprised the Harper government left behind little fiscal capacity.

    Harper Government Accused Of Leaving 'Bare Cupboard' For Liberals

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother
    Sheila Fynes, whose son Cpl. Stuart Langridge died by his own hand in 2008, says she's been made cautiously optimistic by the promise, but the stigma of mental illness, which can lead to suicide, is still very much a part of the military mindset.

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office
    Day parole has been granted to an Alberta man who took nine people hostage at gunpoint in a Workers' Compensation Board office in downtown Edmonton.

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October
    The family of a terminally ill seven-year-old boy whose small Ontario town threw him an early Christmas parade has launched a foundation to support brain cancer research.

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October