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Saskatchewan’s drilling rig count climbs to nine, but still a fraction of previous two years

Drilling rig activity has started to slowly pick up in Saskatchewan’s oilpatch, but the numbers are still very low compared to any point over the last decade. On Sept. 11, Rig Locator (riglocator.ca) showed nine rigs working in Saskatchewan.
Totem rig
This drilling rig, built by Totem Drilling, became a CanElson Drilling, then Trinidad Drilling, and finally Ensign Drilling rig. It spent the downturn racked in Crescent Point’s Stoughton laydown yard, and was cut up for scrap this summer. Photo by Brian Zinchuk, Local Journalism Reporter.

Drilling rig activity has started to slowly pick up in Saskatchewan’s oilpatch, but the numbers are still very low compared to any point over the last decade.

On Sept. 11, Rig Locator (riglocator.ca) showed nine rigs working in Saskatchewan. It was eight the previous day. That makes for a utilization rate of nine per cent, out of a total of 97 rigs within Saskatchewan. And that number has, in recent years, dropped from a steady 120 rigs in the province. Some have recently been cut up for scrap.

Those nine rigs working are an improvement from the static three to five that were working from July 25 to Sept. 7. Drilling activity was totally flatlined at zero from spring breakup, when the COVID-19 crisis hit, until mid-July. For the past several years, Saskatchewan would see roughly 30 to 60 rigs working from May to mid-July.

While nine is an improvement, it is a shadow of even the last few years, considered downturn years, which saw an average of 40 to 55 rigs working throughout the province from late July to mid-September. To put that in perspective, from 2010-2015, there would typically be 60 to 90 rigs working during that period, and in August 2011, a record of 122 rigs were in the field at the same time.

Things aren’t much better in Alberta, where there were 38 out of 359 rigs working on Sept. 11, an 11 per cent utilization rate. In 2019, one of Alberta’s worst drilling years in recent memory, there were 93 rigs working on Sept. 12. The year before that, the number was 157.

Manitoba is showing zero rigs working out of four in the province.

British Columbia is the only jurisdiction showing better numbers this year compared to last year. There were 14 out of 31 rigs working, for a country-leading 31 per cent utilization rate. On Sept. 12, 2019, B.C. had 12 rigs working, and on Sept. 12, 2018, the number was 17.

Nearly all of Saskatchewan’s drilling activity since COVID-19 hit has been on the western side of the province. Only a few holes have been drilled for oil in southeast Saskatchewan. But the increase to nine rigs shows one rig, Precision Drilling Rig 195, working for Crescent Point at Huntoon, northwest of Benson.

As usual, Mosaic Canada had a rig show up at Esterhazy, Ensign Rig 689, working on potash.

In southwest Saskatchewan, helium drilling has continued for North American Helium Inc., which has Savanna Drilling Corp. Rig 629 working at Oxarat, north of Consul.

Vital Energy Inc. has Savanna Rig 419 working just west of Gull Lake, drilling for oil

Teine Energy Ltd. was the first company out of the gate drilling for oil in mid-July, and they’ve kept two rigs going since then. Ensign Drilling Inc. Rigs 351 and 356 are both drilling near Dodsland.

Prairie Thunder Resources Ltd. has also been punching a number of holes, and has Lasso Drilling Corp. Rig 6 working near Macklin.

IPC Canada Ltd. has also been active this summer, and had Ensign Drilling Inc. working at Onion Lake North on a steam injection well.

Serafina Energy had Precision Drilling Rig 188 working at Prince, north of North Battleford.

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