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Western Canadian oil output still down after restoring some COVID-19 cutbacks: CER

A family harvest their wheat crop around an oil and gas pumpjack near Cremona, Alta., Thursday, Oct. 1, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

The Canada Energy Regulator says most, but not all, western Canadian oil production has been restored after being cut because of low prices amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

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The national agency says western Canadian oil supply had slipped by as much as 972,000 barrels per day by mid-May as demand fell due to pandemic lockdowns and global supply grew because of more output from a loose coalition of other oil-producing countries.

CER says Western Canadian producers had brought back online about 700,000 bpd by early October, leaving cutbacks at about 270,000 bpd. In 2019, Western Canada produced an average of about 4.4 million bpd of oil.

READ MORE: Alberta cuts deal on municipal oilpatch levies; not on unpaid property taxes 

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Prices rose through the summer thanks to production cuts from OPEC-plus, a coalition that includes Russia, Mexico and Malaysia, and other producers around the world, including in the United States. At the same time, demand for crude oil grew in Canada and globally.

CER says a rebound in the price for Western Canadian Select bitumen-blend oil increased to roughly US$30 per barrel, higher than the operating costs of many western Canadian oil producers, and allowing some of their production to come back online.

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READ MORE: Pandemic cuts growth forecast as oil demand set to hit 2030 plateau: IEA report 

It says its numbers are based on crude-by-rail exports, pipeline exports, refinery production and weekly oil storage injections and withdrawals.

Watch below: Some recent Global News videos about Alberta’s oil sector.

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