Rich Kruger
Analyst · RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open
Thanks, Troy. Third quarter characterize it as strong results across our business safety, upstream, downstream, turnarounds in particular, Fort Hills acquisition and some organizational improvements I’ll comment on. Let me start with safety, core value, number one priority, safety of our people, employees, and contractors alike. Recognizing that safety is a never ending journey, I’m pleased with and proud of our team. Year-on-year, recordable injuries are down 10%, lost time incidents are down 33% and, most importantly, we’ve had 0 life threatening or life altering injuries in 2023. We’ve had improvement in each and every business segment. And that said, I’d like to call out our downstream. Our downstream had 0 recordable injuries in the third quarter, 0, the first quarter injury-free in our company’s history. It is a very focused effort involving leadership, training, procedures, workforce engagement and technology, a few highlights on the leadership and training front, implementing human and organizational performance leadership training, which is fundamentally about a culture change. We are on target for all Suncor leaders to be trained on HOP by year end 2023, combat on procedures in mining in the third quarter. We completed 4,000 critical control verifications. It’s a big number. The important number is it’s 20% higher than the second quarter. And so, the significance of that is that we are engaging our workforce to focus and safely execute our higher risk activities. In technology, I’ll just comment once again on in mining, where we are installing and employing collision awareness and fatigue management systems. We now have collision awareness equipment installed on over 1,000 pieces of mobile equipment. I’ll continue with Fort Hills. On October 3, we announced a revised deal to acquire Total Canada for $1.468 billion. This is an improved deal versus the original deal. Specifically, we no longer have a contingent payment provision in the acquisition. Similar headline valuation to the earlier Teck deal, but we’ve got additional benefits. Commercial patience and persistence were key here, and we’re pleased with the deal. We’re on track to close the transaction later this month. It addresses long-term bitumen supply uncertainty associated with our upgraders, fills our upgraders for the long-term, but also enables additional value creation, value creation through regional synergies, with mobile equipment deployment, value creation through directing higher yield PFT from Fort Hills to our upgraders, a number of incentives and, as I said, we’re quite pleased with the deal. Continuing with Fort Hills from an operational perspective, we executed our first 5-year full plant turnaround during the third quarter safely, on budget, and on schedule. Production will bang on expectations as per our 3-year improvement plan. We’re continuing to progress mining through the center pit. We’re starting North Pit opening cuts. And of note is success on past lessons learned, zero water, our zero issues with water seeps, our slope instability, and now with 100% ownership and full control, we will be striving, driving for further and faster improvements. On the second quarter call, I highlighted several areas that were considered high priority for improvement, specifically turnaround performance, mining fleet management, and above-field cost. Let me start with turnaround performance. As a reminder, we complete large annual turnarounds at most all of our upstream and downstream sites and spend on the order of $1.3 billion per year or about 20% of our CapEx on turnarounds. I’ve shared before that we benchmark using Solomon and other sources as below average in performance, cost schedule, volumetric impact. So, to describe our efforts as an intensified focus, I can assure you that would be an understatement. So how do we do in the third quarter? We’ll base plant the U2 upgrader, or U2, massive turnaround, nearly 1 million hours, $500-plus million, 55 days. We completed it last week as per plan.I mentioned Fort Hills, the first full plant turnaround, $60 million, 25 days, completed in the third quarter, again, as per plan. Syncrude, we had a large turnaround in the second quarter that was completed per plan, and we had a smaller third quarter turnaround completed early and under budget. Montreal and Edmonton refineries, we had events that overlapped between the third and the start of the first quarter. Smaller in scope, also completed successfully. My message in all this is, we have more work to do, certainly to become best-in-class. But first, we need to improve our performance relative to our internal cost and schedule commitments. And as we drive further and we look at our second and third quarter performance, I would say we’re on track here. Ultimately, our vision is that turnaround performance should be a differentiating core competency for the company. Let me move on to mining fleet performance for context. The cost of physically moving ore from the face of a mine to a crusher for the start of extraction, that’s our single highest cost component in the production of bitumen. Today, we move about 1.3 billion tons of earth per year to support production, and we’ve got a competitive cost gap versus best-in-class, comprehensive efforts to lower our cost per ton. The winning formula, fewer trucks, bigger trucks, more efficient trucks, and, of course, companion or compatible shovels, that’s our mining improvement strategy in a nutshell. So, this year and throughout 2024, we will add via a combination of purchase and lease 55 ultra-class 400-ton trucks to our total fleet, displacing nearly twice as many smaller third-party, less efficient, higher cost vehicles. Each truck will be pre-equipped for ultimate driverless or autonomous operation. The cost for these acquisitions and leases are in our guidance for this year, as well as our guidance that we’ll issue shortly for 2024. Once in place, this action alone is expected to lower our overall corporate breakeven by $1 a barrel. In addition, in the third quarter, we executed a new long-term strategic agreement with Finning, our Caterpillar equipment provider, to deliver value through a win-win framework associated with equipment and parts acquisition, maintenance practices, and fleet reliability. We’re also working with our equally important strategic partner, SMS Equipment Komatsu, on improvements, including finalizing the purchase of the world’s largest hydraulic shovel in production today, the PC9000 series for mid-2024 delivery at Fort Hills. Lastly, in mining, I’ll comment on autonomous operations. Today, we have 31 trucks operating at base plant autonomously. By second quarter 2024, it will be 45, and by year end ‘24, it will be 91. If our data is correct, this will be the largest single mine fleet of autonomous ultra-class trucks globally. Stay tuned for more. Our plans for materially improving mining costs and competitiveness is tangible, focused on safety, lead efficiency, fleet composition, and overall reliability. Let me continue with above-field costs and organizational effectiveness. During our second quarter call, we discussed plans to reduce above-field costs by $400 million a year via workforce reduction of 1,500 people to be completed by year end 2023. And if you recall, in the second quarter, we took a onetime charge of $275 million. Our approach was 100% internal. No consultants advisors focused on limiting low value or unaffordable work. Today, I can share that this effort has been completed 2 months ahead of schedule. Annual cost reductions starting in 2024 of $450 million will be achieved 12% or $50 million above target, in part due to additional reductions of contingent workers or above-field contractors. The impact of this action equates to $1.20 per barrel reduction in our corporate breakeven. As the process unfolded, it certainly hasn’t been easy on our organization, neither of those that left the company nor those that stayed. However difficult, we recognized it was necessary for our competitiveness. Now, we look ahead. Coupled with executive leadership team changes, other structural changes, we are a simpler, more focused organization positioned to compete and win, and that’s exactly what we intend to do. Guidance. During our second quarter call, I mentioned that although tracking at or near the bottom end of guidance, we were focused on meeting our targets and delivering on commitments. I also said that given the material fall turnarounds – impact fall turnarounds have, it made sense to update, if necessary, each year after the majority of our major maintenance work was complete. With that work now behind us and executed well, we are maintaining our guidance unchanged with full year upstream production tracking at or near the 740,000 barrel a day level. Final comments before I turn it over to Kris. I suspect you’ve noticed a few references today in terms of per barrel. This reflects a new and evolving vocabulary within the company, thinking about and communicating the impact of our actions, plans, and improvements in unit per barrel terms. In addition, a subset of us similarly talk about the impact in per share terms. Our vocabulary is part of creating clarity and focus, developing a results-oriented, high-performance culture. With that, I’ll turn it over to Kris.