Alberta’s announcement that it will cut oil production next year to bolster prices sent crude soaring and boosted shares of Canadian producers.

The move by the country’s largest oil-producing province is aimed at easing the crisis in the nation’s energy industry. The plan announced on Sunday will lower production of raw crude and bitumen from Alberta by 325,000 barrels a day, or 8.7 per cent, from January until excess oil in storage is drawn down. The reduction would then drop to 95,000 barrels a day until the end of next year at the latest.

The discount of Western Canadian Select crude to U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate oil narrowed to US$23.23 a barrel as of 4 p.m. New York time Monday. WTI itself climbed to US$53.18 a barrel. Shares of oil producers operating in Alberta also surged, while there were declines for refining companies who had benefited from supplies of cheap crude.

The planned cuts by the world’s fifth-biggest producer follows a renewed commitment over the weekend by Saudi Arabia and Russia to extend their deal to manage the oil market. Global prices crashed last month by the most in more than a decade, a plunge that battered producers in Alberta in particular amid surging oil-sands output, a shortage of pipeline space and heavy U.S. refinery maintenance.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley is following the advice of producers like Cenovus Energy Inc. and Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., which have been hammered by record low prices for heavy Canadian crude, which at one point were US$50 a barrel less than U.S. grades. The crisis has caused some producers to reduce production on their own, slash dividends and delay next year’s drilling plans.

“Every Albertan owns the energy resources in the ground, and we have a duty to defend those resources,” Notley said in a statement. “But right now, they’re being sold for pennies on the dollar. We must act immediately, and we must do it together.”

The amount being cut is more than the total production of each of OPEC’s three smallest members: Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and the Republic of Congo.

Cenovus CEO calling for drilling restrictions BNN Bloomberg speaks with Cenovus CEO Alex Pourbaix about his call on the Alberta government to mandate cuts to oil production in the province to alleviate the oil pipeline bottleneck.

The curtailment plan, which will apply to both oil-sands and conventional producers, should narrow the discount between Western Canada Select and U.S. benchmark oil by at least US$4 a barrel and add an estimated $1.1 billion in government revenue in the fiscal year starting April 2019, according to the statement.

The measure could be removed earlier than the end of 2019, based on market conditions, the government said. The province expects the 325,000-barrel-a-day reduction to be in place for the first three months, while storage is drawn down to historical levels. After that, the government will work to match capacity with production. Further reductions in the curtailment are expected in the fall and winter as additional rail capacity comes online.

Calgary-based Cenovus (CVE.TO) climbed 11.91 per cent - or $1.17 - to close at $10.99 in Toronto and Canadian Natural Resources (CNQ.TO) gained 9.55 per cent, while Devon Energy Corp., a U.S. oil company with a presence in Alberta, rose as much as 8 per cent in New York. Among refiners, HollyFrontier Corp. dropped as much as 6.3 per cent in New York and Imperial Oil Ltd. declined 3.74 per cent in Toronto.

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Save Jobs

The action is designed to prevent job cuts by letting companies keep people on because they can “see a light at the end of the tunnel,” Notley said at a news conference. Small producer Whitecap Resources Inc. now doesn’t plan to cut any jobs as a result of the Alberta plan, Chief Executive Officer Grant Fagerheim said in an interview.

“Government intervention is never the preferred route, but because of the crisis that’s taken place in Alberta and Canada, we can understand that this is the route taken,” Fagerheim said. His company will have to cut about 350 barrels a day from its current level of 14,000.

To protect smaller drillers, the first 10,000 barrels of a producer’s output will be exempted from the cut. Each company’s level of curtailment will be based on six months of its highest level of production over the past 12 months, according to the statement. The province expects the curtailment to affect about 25 producers.

Historical Move

The plan marks the first time the provincial government has ordered a production cut since the 1980s, and that previous move was meant to protest federal energy policies, not solely to boost prices.

A chorus of companies, investors and industry leaders has rallied to the idea in recent weeks, saying that no other measure could help work down the glut of oil backed up in storage as quickly. Even Notley’s main political rival -- United Conservative Party Leader Jason Kenney -- has called for a curtailment.

Alex Pourbaix, president and CEO of Cenovus Inc., said Notley's measures will help balance the market in the short term.

"While curtailments have been used before by previous governments, we believe they should only be used for a short period of time, and only in extreme cases. This is an extreme case," Pourbaix said in a statement following Notley's announcement Sunday. "It makes no sense for Alberta to stand by while its valuable oil resources sell for next to nothing, the provincial Treasury loses up to $100 million a day, job losses continue to mount and our industry suffers billions of dollars in long-term value destruction."

About the only dissenting voice has come from Canada’s integrated oil companies, whose refineries have been benefiting from the cheaper feedstock. Suncor Energy Inc., a Canadian oil producer that also has refineries in the country, said in a statement Monday that price differentials were already narrowing.

“Suncor believes the market is the most effective means to balance supply and demand and normalize differentials," it said.

McCreath: Alberta Premier Notley 'made the best out of a bad situation' for the struggling oil industry BNN Bloomberg Commentator Andrew McCreath discusses Alberta Premier Rachel Notley ordering oil producers in the province to cut output by 8.7 per cent. He says that although international oil players will be hurt, the decision will help the domestic economy.

Notley has already taken some steps to try to help producers ship more oil to market while the industry awaits the construction of more pipelines.

Last week, she announced a plan to buy rail cars to help ship an additional 120,000 barrels of crude a day, increasing already-record levels of crude shipped by train by more than 30 per cent. That plan entails running two additional trains a day, each pulling 100 to 120 cars. The system would require a total of about 80 locomotives and more than 7,000 cars.

However, it was Notley’s assurances that a decision on curtailing output was coming soon that helped boost heavy Canadian crude prices by 49 per cent last week.

Even after that gain, Western Canada Select crude was trading for US$29 a barrel less than U.S. benchmarks. WCS closed at US$13.46 a barrel earlier this month, the lowest on record in Bloomberg data stretching back to 2008. The grade’s discount to U.S. benchmark oil prices widened to US$50 a barrel last month, also a record.

With files from BNN Bloomberg