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Husky building two new heavy oil projects in Saskatchewan

Husky Energy CEO Asim Ghosh addresses the company's annual meeting in Calgary, Tuesday, May 7, 2013. The company announced on Wednesday it has approved two new heavy oil projects in western Saskatchewan. Jeff McIntosh / The Canadian Press

CALGARY – Husky Energy Inc. has given the green light to two new heavy oil projects in Saskatchewan that will together churn out 20,000 barrels of crude per day.

Engineering is underway on the Edam East and Vawn projects with construction set to begin later this year. First oil is expected in 2016.

The company (TSX:HSE) says the projects build on the success it’s had in the Lloydminster region, near the Alberta border, using heat to get the thick crude out of the ground.

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Husky says the two projects are part of the company’s plan to produce 55,000 barrels per day from its thermal heavy oil projects by 2016 – a year sooner than a target set out in December 2012.

Up to 400 construction jobs will be created while the projects are built and 20 people will be employed full-time at each location once the plants are up and running.

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Husky is majority-owned by Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing and has a 2014 capital budget of $4.8 billion.

“Three years ago, with heavy oil production fighting to remain flat, we implemented a strategy to transform and rejuvenate the business. We are seeing the results of that today,” CEO Asim Ghosh said in a release.

“Steady performance from our existing thermal facilities and these two new plants, along with projects currently under construction at Sandall and Rush Lake, will add another 33,500 barrels per day of new production over the next three years, more than offsetting declines in non-thermal production.”

With files from Global News

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