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Acquisitions, insolvencies cited as drilling company count tumbles by 40%

WATCH ABOVE: In January 2019, only 11 per cent of oil and gas rigs in Canada were being used. While part of the reason is a slowdown over the Christmas break, as provincial affairs reporter Tom Vernon explains, there are concerns we won't see a surge in activity through 2019 – Jan 2, 2019

A research report by AltaCorp Capital shows the number of companies actively drilling in Canada has declined by 40 per cent since the oil price crash of late 2014.

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The analysis cites industry data which shows only 26 drilling contractors have been working so far in 2019, 17 fewer than observed in 2014.

It says consolidation is the biggest reason companies have disappeared, with seven companies holding about 17 per cent of market share being purchased over the period, including CanElson Drilling in 2015, Savanna Drilling in 2017 and Trinidad Drilling in 2018.

It says insolvency removed four companies — although the market share held by those firms was just one per cent. Two companies which together held about one per cent of market share in 2014 are simply inactive — they have rigs but aren’t operating them.

One company left the Canadian market and the fate of four other missing names isn’t known. There is just one new entrant on the 2019 list.

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READ MORE: Western Canada oil and gas producer count down by nearly 300 names since 2014

The report says the Canadian drilling market would benefit from more consolidation given recent declines in drilling activity but says acquisitions are unlikely given high debt levels in the larger players and the relatively unattractive assets available.

“Ultimately, we expect that rig transfers out of Canada, smaller one-off asset sales and gradual atrophy of older and less relevant rigs, will be the primary drivers of further Canadian industry concentration over the near-to-mid-term,” the report concludes.

Watch (November 2018): Drilling forecasts predict more pain for Alberta

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