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PARIS – France’s Total said on Friday it would spend $1.75 billion to forge a partnership with Suncor Energy in Canada’s oil sands, the latest foreign push into a booming new source of oil wealth.
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The French oil giant and Canada’s largest energy company announced deals encompassing three projects in Alberta, where Asian investors have already been pouring funds into tarry deposits that have opened a new frontier in oil supplies.
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+ u' z9 L- {# q9 k ^( ATotal said it would buy 19.2 per cent of Suncor’s interest in the Fort Hills project, raising to 39.2 per cent its stake in the mining project. Suncor, with a 40.8-per-cent stake, will remain operator of the venture near Calgary." m* [8 Y3 r3 B7 z0 G( P9 D
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Suncor will acquire 36.75 per cent of Total’s interest in the Joslyn project, where operator Total will retain 38.25 per cent.
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Total is buying 49 per cent of the Suncor-operated Voyageur project near Fort McMurray, where construction stopped in 2008.& g* L3 s; T. C4 G4 S
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“Suncor and Total have agreed to a joint commitment to develop Fort Hills and Voyageur in parallel so that both come on stream early 2016,” the companies said in a statement.
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The moves came as Suncor unveiled a 10-year growth strategy including plans to increase oil production.1 n, b' y( }6 j% n% N0 p
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Total’s deal with Suncor follows its $1.5-billion acquisition in July of UTS Energy Corp., a takeover that gave Total a 20-per-cent stake in Fort Hills.
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) h1 T/ N% Q* k: }Total, the fifth-largest Western oil company by market value, already has significant investments in Canada, where it plans to spend as much as $20 billion over the next 15 years.
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Technical challenges mean the cost of producing the tarry bitumen trapped in sand and clay is high, making investments in new projects feasible only if oil prices are at about $80 a barrel. Oil was at $88.05 a barrel early on Friday.
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Alberta’s oil sands are seen as the largest potential source of crude outside the Middle East and are the target of billions of dollars of spending by the world’s oil industry. Chinese, South Korean and Thai investors have contributed to the Canadian tar rush with a wave of acquisitions. m/ }+ g1 Q; y" I' W/ @
3 ~7 D+ p" p, a) H! f( HBut developments in the region are bitterly opposed by environmental groups concerned about rising greenhouse-gas emissions and water pollution.
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3 c- z5 k% S- K( tTotal has interests in the Surmont project, with ConocoPhillips, and in the Northern Lights project through its 2008 acquisition of Synenco Energy.
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