C’est la vie: Canadian energy producer accepts French drilling ban with a shrug
CALGARY — The traditional 20th anniversary present is china but Canada’s Vermilion Energy Inc. (TSX:VET) is getting quite a different gift for its second decade as a light oil producer in France: a divorce petition with an implementation date of 2040.
France imports 99 per cent of the oil it consumes but the Calgary-based company produces three-quarters of the other one per cent. It thus stands to be more impacted than most by a draft climate change bill that could be law by year-end.
The bill would make France the first country in the world to ban all domestic hydrocarbon production.
In an interview at his downtown Calgary office, Vermilion CEO Tony Marino is taking the setback in stride, although the company produces about 11,400 barrels of oil per day in France, roughly 16 per cent of its overall output.