Cenovus Energy Inc. (TSX: CVE) (NYSE: CVE) generated nearly $2.0
billion in cash from operating activities, approximately $1.9
billion in adjusted funds flow and $897 million in free funds flow
in the second quarter of 2023. Total upstream production was
approximately 730,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (BOE/d)1,
reflecting a planned turnaround at Foster Creek and production
impacts in the Conventional segment in May and June due to Alberta
wildfire activity. Downstream throughput averaged almost 538,000
barrels per day (bbls/d), increasing in the quarter as volumes
ramped up following restart work at the Superior and Toledo
refineries.
“We achieved significant operational milestones across the
company over the quarter,” said Jon McKenzie, Cenovus President
& Chief Executive Officer. “With all that we have accomplished
during the quarter, we’re well positioned for the back half of 2023
and beyond.”
Highlights
- Ramped up throughput at the Toledo Refinery, which is now fully
operational. The Superior Refinery is processing crude oil and
continues to progress the start-up of its fluid catalytic cracking
unit.
- Delivered $575 million to shareholders in the second quarter
through buybacks and common share dividends; in addition to the
purchase and cancellation of 45.5 million outstanding warrants for
$711 million.
- Achieved a major milestone on the West White Rose project as
the company completed the concrete pour on the offshore platform’s
conical slip.
- Successfully completed a three-week turnaround at the company’s
Foster Creek oil sands project.
- Released Cenovus’s 2022 environmental, social and governance
(ESG) report, detailing overall sustainability performance and
progress on the company’s ESG targets, as well as a new milestone
to reduce absolute methane emissions in upstream operations by 80%
by year-end 2028, from a 2019 baseline.
Financial, production & throughput
summary |
(For the period ended June 30) |
2023 Q2 |
2023 Q1 |
% change |
2022 Q2 |
% change |
Financial ($ millions, except per share
amounts) |
Cash from (used in) operating
activities |
1,990 |
(286) |
|
2,979 |
(33) |
Adjusted funds flow2 |
1,899 |
1,395 |
36 |
3,098 |
(39) |
Per share (basic)2 |
1.00 |
0.73 |
|
1.57 |
|
Per share (diluted)2 |
0.98 |
0.71 |
|
1.53 |
|
Capital investment |
1,002 |
1,101 |
(9) |
822 |
22 |
Free funds flow2 |
897 |
294 |
205 |
2,276 |
(61) |
Excess free funds flow2 |
505 |
(499) |
|
2,020 |
(75) |
Net earnings (loss) |
866 |
636 |
36 |
2,432 |
(64) |
Per share (basic) |
0.45 |
0.33 |
|
1.23 |
|
Per share (diluted) |
0.44 |
0.32 |
|
1.19 |
|
Long-term debt, including
current portion |
8,534 |
8,681 |
(2) |
11,228 |
(24) |
Net debt |
6,367 |
6,632 |
(4) |
7,535 |
(16) |
Production and throughput (before royalties, net to
Cenovus) |
Oil and NGLs (bbls/d)1 |
608,400 |
636,200 |
(4) |
614,200 |
(1) |
Conventional natural gas
(MMcf/d) |
729.4 |
857.0 |
(15) |
882.2 |
(17) |
Total upstream
production (BOE/d)1 |
729,900 |
779,000 |
(6) |
761,500 |
(4) |
Total downstream
throughput (bbls/d) |
537,800 |
457,900 |
17 |
457,300 |
18 |
1 See Advisory for production by product type. 2 Non-GAAP
financial measure or contains a non-GAAP financial measure. See
Advisory.
Organizational changes
To reflect the further evolution of Cenovus as a company over
the past two years, the Board of Directors has approved some role
changes on Cenovus’s executive team. Effective September 1,
2023:
- Keith Chiasson (Executive Vice-President, Downstream) will
become Cenovus’s Executive Vice-President & Chief Operating
Officer, responsible for all aspects of the company’s
operations.
- Doreen Cole (Senior Vice-President, Downstream Manufacturing)
will join Cenovus’s executive team as Executive Vice-President,
Downstream.
- Drew Zieglgansberger (Executive Vice-President, Natural Gas
& Technical Services) will become Cenovus’s Executive
Vice-President & Chief Commercial Officer, a new role
responsible for all commercial arrangements across the company,
including strategy, business development, planning and
marketing.
- Andrew Dahlin (Executive Vice-President, Corporate &
Operations Services) will take on the role of Executive
Vice-President, Natural Gas & Technical Services.
- Jeff Hart (Executive Vice-President & Chief Financial
Officer) will become Executive Vice-President, Corporate &
Operations Services.
- Kam Sandhar (Executive Vice-President, Strategy & Corporate
Development) will become Executive Vice-President & Chief
Financial Officer and continue to be responsible for Investor
Relations.
There are no planned changes to the roles of Susan Anderson,
Senior Vice-President, People Services, Rhona DelFrari, Chief
Sustainability Officer & Executive Vice-President, Stakeholder
Engagement, Gary Molnar, Senior Vice-President, Legal, General
Counsel & Corporate Secretary, and Norrie Ramsay, Executive
Vice-President, Upstream – Thermal, Major Projects &
Offshore.
“These changes reflect the capability and versatility of
Cenovus’s exceptional executive team. I have absolute confidence
they will continue to generate value for our shareholders,” said
McKenzie. “Our executive team structure will now better reflect the
size and complexity of the company we are today.”
Board update
The company also announced today that, due to the demands of
other commitments, Canning K.N. Fok retired from the Cenovus
Board of Directors effective July 26, 2023, and confirms that
Mr. Fok will continue to support and assist the company as the CEO
of one of its major shareholders. It is expected that, in
accordance with the standstill agreements entered into at the time
of the Husky Energy transaction, a new director to replace Mr. Fok
will be nominated before the end of the year.
“On behalf of the entire Board, I would like to thank Canning
for his valuable insights, experience and commitment during his
service as a member of the Board,” said Alex Pourbaix, Executive
Chair of the Board. “As a director of Cenovus since the Husky
Energy transaction, Canning has been a thoughtful and effective
contributor to the integration and success of the combined
organization."
Second-quarter results
Operating results1
Cenovus’s total revenues were approximately $12.2 billion in the
second quarter, in line with $12.3 billion in the first quarter of
2023. Upstream revenues were about $6.8 billion, similar to the
previous quarter, and downstream revenues were $7.6 billion,
compared with nearly $7.4 billion in the first quarter. Total
operating margin3 was $2.4 billion, compared with about $2.1
billion in the first quarter. Upstream operating margin4 was
approximately $2.3 billion, an increase from $1.7 billion in the
prior quarter, primarily driven by a tighter light-heavy
differential and lower condensate blending costs, partially offset
by lower Brent and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil prices
and decreased production volumes. Downstream operating margin4 was
$143 million, compared with $391 million in the first quarter. U.S.
Manufacturing operating margin was negatively impacted by
approximately $170 million due to the cost of processing crude oil
purchased in prior periods at higher prices as well as the
narrowing of heavy oil differentials.
3 Non-GAAP financial measure. Total operating margin is the
total of Upstream operating margin plus Downstream operating
margin. See Advisory.4 Specified financial measure. See
Advisory.
Total upstream production was 729,900 BOE/d in the second
quarter, a decrease from the first quarter as the company
experienced production impacts due to Alberta wildfire activity and
planned maintenance. Foster Creek production of 167,000 bbls/d,
compared with 190,000 bbls/d in the first quarter, reflects a
planned three-week turnaround that was completed in the second
quarter. Christina Lake production was 234,900 bbls/d, in line with
the prior quarter as the company continued to progress its
redevelopment and redrill program, including new well pads at both
Foster Creek and Christina Lake. Sunrise production was 46,500
bbls/d, in line with first-quarter production of 44,500 bbls/d. At
the Lloydminster thermal projects, production increased to 106,200
bbls/d from 99,000 bbls/d in the prior quarter, as the company
continued to focus on optimization of the asset.
In response to the Alberta wildfires that began in May and
continued into early June, Cenovus shut in several producing
conventional fields and processing plants as a precaution.
Production in the Conventional segment was 104,600 BOE/d in the
second quarter compared with 123,900 BOE/d in the first quarter. No
significant damage was identified at any Cenovus assets, and
production at all facilities returned to normal rates in late June,
with the exception of approximately 5,000 BOE/d to 7,000 BOE/d
currently offline at the Rainbow Lake facility due to electric
power constraints from a third-party provider. Cenovus estimates
the annualized impact to production in the Conventional segment to
be approximately 8,000 BOE/d to 10,000 BOE/d, and as a result has
revised Conventional production guidance to between 115,000 BOE/d
and 130,000 BOE/d.
In the Offshore segment, production was 51,500 BOE/d compared
with 65,600 BOE/d in the previous quarter. In Asia Pacific, sales
volumes decreased compared with the first quarter as a result of a
temporary unplanned outage in China, when an unauthorized vessel
travelled into a dedicated pipeline corridor and struck an
umbilical line. In Indonesia, sales volumes were higher than the
first quarter of 2023, with the MBH and MDA fields continuing to
ramp up. In the Atlantic region, production was 5,300 bbls/d
compared with 8,900 bbls/d in the first quarter as the company
advanced a planned turnaround at the SeaRose floating production,
storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel, originally scheduled for the
fall, into the first and second quarters. Light crude oil from
production at the White Rose field is offloaded from the SeaRose
FPSO to tankers and stored at an onshore terminal before shipment
to buyers, which results in a timing difference between production
and sales. There were no sales volumes in the second quarter due to
this timing. The non-operated Terra Nova FPSO remains dockside in
Newfoundland and Labrador, as it continues to undergo maintenance
as part of its asset life extension program.
In U.S. Manufacturing, crude throughput was 442,500 bbls/d, an
increase of 23%, compared with 359,200 bbls/d in the first quarter.
The Superior Refinery introduced crude oil in mid-March and
increased throughput throughout the second quarter. Cenovus began
restarting the Toledo Refinery in April, ramping up volumes through
the second quarter, and the facility is now fully operational. The
Toledo and Superior refineries are both producing saleable
products. The company’s Lima Refinery continues to deliver strong
performance, with 93% utilization achieved in the quarter. At the
non-operated Borger Refinery, utilization was impacted by a planned
turnaround and temporary unplanned outages. The refinery is now
fully operational. The non-operated Wood River Refinery completed a
planned turnaround in May and is now fully operational.
Crude utilization in the Canadian Manufacturing segment was 86%
with throughput of 95,300 bbls/d, compared with crude utilization
and throughput of 89% and 98,700 bbls/d in the first quarter.
Financial results
Second-quarter cash from operating activities, which includes
changes in non-cash working capital, was nearly $2.0 billion,
compared with cash used in operating activities of $286 million in
the first quarter of 2023. Adjusted funds flow was $1.9 billion,
compared with $1.4 billion in the prior period, and free funds flow
increased to $897 million from $294 million in the first quarter.
Second-quarter financial results improved compared with the first
quarter, primarily due to higher price realizations in the Oil
Sands segment, driven by narrower light-heavy crude oil
differentials and lower condensate prices. In addition, Oil Sands
segment sales volumes outpaced production by approximately 4,000
BOE/d as the company drew down product inventory built through the
first quarter of 2023 and fourth quarter of 2022. These factors
were partially offset by higher operating costs in the U.S.
Manufacturing segment related to the commissioning and start-up of
the Superior and Toledo refineries, as well as planned and
unplanned maintenance at Borger. Results in the U.S. Manufacturing
segment were lower by approximately $170 million due to the cost of
processing crude oil purchased in prior periods at higher prices,
in addition to lower sales volumes than production volumes due to
inventory build-up at the Lima Refinery and a normal time lag
expected on sales with the ramp up of the Toledo and Superior
refineries.
Capital investment of $1.0 billion in the second quarter was
primarily directed towards sustaining production in the Oil Sands
segment, the ongoing construction of the West White Rose project
and the Terra Nova asset life extension, in addition to refining
reliability initiatives in the U.S. Manufacturing segment and
completing rebuild activities at the Superior Refinery.
Net earnings in the second quarter were $866 million, compared
with $636 million in the previous quarter. The increase in net
earnings was primarily due to higher operating margin and a
favourable unrealized foreign exchange gain, partially offset by
higher income tax.
Long-term debt, including the current portion, was $8.5 billion
at June 30, 2023, compared with $8.7 billion as at March 31, 2023.
Net debt was approximately $6.4 billion at June 30, 2023, a
decrease of $265 million from March 31, 2023, primarily due to an
increase in free funds flow generated in the second quarter of 2023
compared with the prior quarter. The company continues to focus on
making progress towards its net debt target of $4.0 billion.
2023 guidance updates
Cenovus has revised its 2023 corporate guidance to reflect the
company’s updated outlook for commodity prices, production and
operating expenses for the remainder of the year. It is available
on cenovus.com under Investors.
Changes to the company’s 2023 guidance include:
- Reducing Conventional output by 10,000 BOE/d to a range of
115,000 BOE/d to 130,000 BOE/d as a result of the production impact
from wildfires in Alberta.
- Lowering Lloydminster thermal production by 5,000 bbls/d to a
range of 100,000 bbls/d to 110,000 bbls/d, reflecting year-to-date
operating performance.
- Adjusting the total production range by 15,000 BOE/d to between
775,000 BOE/d and 795,000 BOE/d.
- Expected cash taxes for 2023 have been lowered at the midpoint
by $200 million, to a revised range of $1.1 billion to $1.4 billion
for 2023.
In addition, the company has updated Conventional operating
expenses and royalties, and revised its commodity price deck and
sensitivities. The company continues to execute its capital program
and there has been no change to Cenovus’s expected capital
investment range of $4.0 billion to $4.5 billion.
Dividend declarations and share purchases
The Board of Directors has declared a quarterly base dividend of
$0.14 per common share, payable on September 29, 2023 to
shareholders of record as of September 15, 2023. In addition, the
Board has declared a quarterly dividend on each of the Cumulative
Redeemable First Preferred Shares – Series 1, Series 2, Series 3,
Series 5 and Series 7 – payable on October 3, 2023 to
shareholders of record as of September 15, 2023 as follows:
Preferred shares dividend summary |
|
Rate (%) |
Amount ($/share) |
Share series |
Series 1 |
2.577 |
0.16106 |
Series 2 |
6.293 |
0.39655 |
Series 3 |
4.689 |
0.29306 |
Series 5 |
4.591 |
0.28694 |
Series 7 |
3.935 |
0.24594 |
|
|
|
All dividends paid on Cenovus’s common and preferred shares will
be designated as “eligible dividends” for Canadian federal income
tax purposes. Declaration of dividends is at the sole discretion of
the Board and will continue to be evaluated on a quarterly
basis.
Cenovus’s shareholder returns framework has a target of
returning 50% of excess free funds flow to shareholders for
quarters where the ending net debt is between $9.0 billion and $4.0
billion. In the second quarter, the company bought approximately 14
million shares under its normal course issuer bid (NCIB),
delivering $310 million in returns to shareholders. In June,
Cenovus reached separate agreements with each of Hutchison Whampoa
Europe Investments S.à r.l. (HWEI) and L.F. Investments S.à r.l.
(LFI) to purchase for cancellation all of the warrants held by HWEI
and LFI, respectively, representing an aggregate of 45,484,672
warrants (CVE.WT), for a total of $711 million. The company has
negotiated payment terms that provide flexibility to work within
its shareholder returns framework, and at its discretion Cenovus
has the option to pay the aggregate warrant purchase price of $711
million through the remainder of 2023, within each quarter’s excess
free funds flow, with full payment being made no later than January
5, 2024. In the second quarter, the company elected to direct
excess free funds flow to its NCIB program, and as a result no
payment was made to either HWEI or LFI as part of the warrant
purchases.
2023 planned maintenance
The following table provides details on planned maintenance
activities at Cenovus assets through the remainder of 2023 and
anticipated production or throughput impacts.
2023 planned maintenance |
Potential quarterly production/throughput impact
(Mbbls/d) |
|
Q3 |
Q4 |
Upstream |
Lloydminster Thermals |
1 - 2 |
- |
Downstream |
U.S. Manufacturing |
10 - 12 |
55 - 65 |
|
|
|
Sustainability
During the quarter, Cenovus released its 2022 ESG report,
updating progress the company made towards targets in its five ESG
focus areas: climate & greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, water
stewardship, biodiversity, Indigenous reconciliation and inclusion
& diversity. Cenovus also announced a milestone to reduce
absolute methane emissions in its upstream operations by 80% by
year-end 2028, from a 2019 baseline. This is a key milestone
towards the company’s target to reduce absolute GHG emissions by
35% by year-end 2035 as Cenovus builds toward its long-term
ambition of achieving net zero emissions from operations by
2050.
The ESG report shows continued progress in several areas,
including reducing absolute methane emissions in upstream
operations by 32% from 2021 levels, and 59% between 2019 and 2022.
The company also spent $395 million, or the equivalent of more than
$1 million each day in 2022, with Indigenous businesses in areas
such as engineering and construction services. Building on this
work, Cenovus has now achieved its target of spending at least $1.2
billion with Indigenous businesses between 2019 and year-end 2025.
The company continues to seek additional opportunities to expand
the scope of work it does with Indigenous communities and
businesses in the areas that it operates.
In addition, Cenovus has achieved its aspiration to have at
least 40% representation from designated groups (defined as women,
Indigenous peoples, persons with disabilities and members of
visible minorities) among non-management members of the Board of
Directors by year-end 2025. Cenovus recognizes and embraces the
benefits of having a diverse Board, with a Board Diversity Policy
committing it to seeking highly qualified directors and to consider
diversity when determining the best composition for the Board.
Conference call today
9 a.m. Mountain Time (11 a.m. Eastern Time)
Cenovus will host a conference call today, July 27, 2023,
starting at 9 a.m. MT (11 a.m. ET).To join the conference call
without operator assistance, please register here approximately 5
minutes in advance to receive an automated call-back when the
session begins.
Alternatively, you can dial 888-664-6383 (toll-free in North
America) or 416-764-8650 to reach a live operator who will join you
into the call. A live audio webcast will also be available and will
be archived for approximately 90 days.
Advisory
Basis of
Presentation
Cenovus reports financial results in Canadian dollars and
presents production volumes on a net to Cenovus before royalties
basis, unless otherwise stated. Cenovus prepares its financial
statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting
Standards (IFRS).
Barrels of Oil
Equivalent
Natural gas volumes have been converted to barrels of oil
equivalent (BOE) on the basis of six thousand cubic feet (Mcf) to
one barrel (bbl). BOE may be misleading, particularly if used in
isolation. A conversion ratio of one bbl to six Mcf is based on an
energy equivalency conversion method primarily applicable at the
burner tip and does not represent value equivalency at the
wellhead. Given that the value ratio based on the current price of
crude oil compared with natural gas is significantly different from
the energy equivalency conversion ratio of 6:1, utilizing a
conversion on a 6:1 basis is not an accurate reflection of
value.
Product types
Product type by operating segment |
|
Three months ended June 30,
2023 |
Oil Sands |
Bitumen (Mbbls/d) |
554.6 |
Heavy crude oil (Mbbls/d) |
17.0 |
Conventional natural gas (MMcf/d) |
12.9 |
Total Oil Sands segment production (MBOE/d) |
573.8 |
Conventional |
Light crude oil (Mbbls/d) |
4.8 |
Natural gas liquids (Mbbls/d) |
18.0 |
Conventional natural gas (MMcf/d) |
491.4 |
Total Conventional segment production
(MBOE/d) |
104.6 |
Offshore |
Light crude oil (Mbbls/d) |
5.3 |
Natural gas liquids (Mbbls/d) |
8.7 |
Conventional natural gas (MMcf/d) |
225.1 |
Total Offshore segment production (MBOE/d) |
51.5 |
Total upstream production (MBOE/d) |
729.9 |
Forward‐looking
Information
This news release contains certain forward‐looking statements
and forward‐looking information (collectively referred to as
“forward‐looking information”) within the meaning of applicable
securities legislation about Cenovus’s current expectations,
estimates and projections about the future of the company, based on
certain assumptions made in light of the company’s experiences and
perceptions of historical trends. Although Cenovus believes that
the expectations represented by such forward‐looking information
are reasonable, there can be no assurance that such expectations
will prove to be correct.
Forward‐looking information in this document is identified by
words such as “anticipate”, “continue”, “deliver”, “expect”,
“estimate”, “focus”, “milestone”, “position”, “progress”, “target”
and “will” or similar expressions and includes suggestions of
future outcomes, including, but not limited to, statements about:
performance for the rest of 2023 and beyond; Cenovus’s five ESG
focus areas, commitments, targets and ambition, including the
governance, strategies, plans and milestones for achieving them;
reducing absolute net equity-based scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions by
35% by year-end 2035 from 2019 levels including reducing absolute
methane emissions in upstream operations by 80% by year-end 2028
and long-term ambition to achieve net zero GHG emissions from
operations by 2050; achieving net debt of $4.0 billion; generating
value for shareholders; progressing the start-up of the fluid
catalytic cracking unit at the Superior Refinery; the redevelopment
and redrill program at Christina Lake and Foster Creek; ongoing
construction of the West White Rose project and the Terra Nova
asset life extension; planned turnaround activities; dividend
payments; excess free funds flow under the shareholder returns
framework; and revised 2023 corporate guidance.
Developing forward‐looking information involves reliance on a
number of assumptions and consideration of certain risks and
uncertainties, some of which are specific to Cenovus and others
that apply to the industry generally. The factors or assumptions on
which the forward‐looking information in this news release are
based include, but are not limited to: the allocation of free funds
flow to reducing net debt; commodity prices, inflation and supply
chain constraints; Cenovus’s ability to produce on an unconstrained
basis; Cenovus’s ability to access sufficient insurance coverage to
pursue development plans; Cenovus’s ability to deliver safe and
reliable operations and demonstrate strong governance; and the
assumptions inherent in Cenovus’s revised 2023 Guidance available
on cenovus.com.
The risk factors and uncertainties that could cause actual
results to differ materially from the forward‐looking information
in this news release include, but are not limited to: the accuracy
of estimates regarding commodity production and operating expenses,
inflation, taxes, royalties, capital costs and currency and
interest rates; risks inherent in the operation of Cenovus’s
business; and risks associated with climate change and Cenovus’s
assumptions relating thereto and other risks identified under “Risk
Management and Risk Factors” and “Advisory” in Cenovus’s
Management’s Discussion and Analysis (MD&A) for the year
ended December 31, 2022.
Except as required by applicable securities laws, Cenovus
disclaims any intention or obligation to publicly update or revise
any forward‐looking statements, whether as a result of new
information, future events or otherwise. Readers are cautioned that
the foregoing lists are not exhaustive and are made as at the date
hereof. Events or circumstances could cause actual results to
differ materially from those estimated or projected and expressed
in, or implied by, the forward‐looking information. For additional
information regarding Cenovus’s material risk factors, the
assumptions made, and risks and uncertainties which could cause
actual results to differ from the anticipated results, refer to
“Risk Management and Risk Factors” and “Advisory” in Cenovus’s
MD&A for the periods ended December 31, 2022 and June 30,
2023, and to the risk factors, assumptions and uncertainties
described in other documents Cenovus files from time to time with
securities regulatory authorities in Canada (available on SEDAR
at sedar.com, on EDGAR at sec.gov and Cenovus’s
website at cenovus.com).
Specified Financial Measures
This news release contains references to certain specified
financial measures that do not have standardized meanings
prescribed by IFRS. Readers should not consider these measures in
isolation or as a substitute for analysis of the company’s results
as reported under IFRS. These measures are defined differently by
different companies and, therefore, might not be comparable to
similar measures presented by other issuers. For information on the
composition of these measures, as well as an explanation of how the
company uses these measures, refer to the Specified Financial
Measures Advisory located in Cenovus’s MD&A for the period
ended June 30, 2023 (available on SEDAR at sedar.com, on EDGAR
at sec.gov and on Cenovus's website at cenovus.com) which is
incorporated by reference into this news release.
Upstream Operating Margin and Downstream Operating
Margin
Upstream Operating Margin and Downstream Operating Margin, and
the individual components thereof, are included in Note 1 to the
interim Consolidated Financial Statements.
Total Operating Margin
Total Operating Margin is the total of Upstream Operating Margin
plus Downstream Operating Margin.
|
Upstream (1) |
|
Downstream (1) |
|
Total |
($ millions) |
Q2 2023 |
|
|
Q1 2023 |
|
Q2 2022 |
|
Q2 2023 |
|
|
Q1 2023 |
|
Q2 2022 |
|
Q2 2023 |
|
|
Q1 2023 |
|
Q2 2022 |
Revenues |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gross Sales |
7,399 |
|
|
7,415 |
|
11,685 |
|
7,561 |
|
|
7,368 |
|
10,719 |
|
14,960 |
|
|
14,783 |
|
22,404 |
Less: Royalties |
637 |
|
|
596 |
|
1,582 |
|
— |
|
|
— |
|
— |
|
637 |
|
|
596 |
|
1,582 |
|
6,762 |
|
|
6,819 |
|
10,103 |
|
7,561 |
|
|
7,368 |
|
10,719 |
|
14,323 |
|
|
14,187 |
|
20,822 |
Expenses |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Purchased Product |
885 |
|
|
1,069 |
|
1,461 |
|
6,581 |
|
|
6,222 |
|
8,919 |
|
7,466 |
|
|
7,291 |
|
10,380 |
Transportation and
Blending |
2,750 |
|
|
2,994 |
|
3,238 |
|
— |
|
|
— |
|
— |
|
2,750 |
|
|
2,994 |
|
3,238 |
Operating |
883 |
|
|
1,029 |
|
1,010 |
|
843 |
|
|
754 |
|
866 |
|
1,726 |
|
|
1,783 |
|
1,876 |
Realized (Gain) Loss on Risk
Management |
(13 |
) |
|
16 |
|
563 |
|
(6 |
) |
|
1 |
|
87 |
|
(19 |
) |
|
17 |
|
650 |
Operating
Margin |
2,257 |
|
|
1,711 |
|
3,831 |
|
143 |
|
|
391 |
|
847 |
|
2,400 |
|
|
2,102 |
|
4,678 |
(1) Found in Note 1 of the June
30, 2023, or March 31, 2023, interim Consolidated Financial
Statements.
Adjusted Funds Flow, Free Funds Flow and Excess Free
Funds Flow
The following table provides a reconciliation of cash from (used
in) operating activities found in Cenovus’s Consolidated Financial
Statements to Adjusted Funds Flow, Free Funds Flow and Excess Free
Funds Flow. Adjusted Funds Flow per Share – Basic and Adjusted
Funds Flow per Share – Diluted are calculated by dividing Adjusted
Funds Flow by the respective basic or diluted weighted average
number of common shares outstanding during the period and may be
useful to evaluate a company’s ability to generate cash.
|
Three Months Ended |
($ millions) |
June 30, 2023 |
|
|
March 31, 2022 |
|
|
June 30, 2022 |
|
Cash From (Used in) Operating Activities (1) |
1,990 |
|
|
(286 |
) |
|
2,979 |
|
(Add) Deduct: |
|
|
|
|
|
Settlement of Decommissioning
Liabilities |
(41 |
) |
|
(48 |
) |
|
(27 |
) |
Net Change in Non-Cash Working
Capital |
132 |
|
|
(1,633 |
) |
|
(92 |
) |
Adjusted Funds
Flow |
1,899 |
|
|
1,395 |
|
|
3,098 |
|
Capital Investment |
1,002 |
|
|
1,101 |
|
|
822 |
|
Free Funds
Flow |
897 |
|
|
294 |
|
|
2,276 |
|
Add (Deduct): |
|
|
|
|
|
Base Dividends Paid on Common
Shares |
(265 |
) |
|
(200 |
) |
|
(207 |
) |
Dividends Paid on Preferred
Shares |
(9 |
) |
|
(18 |
) |
|
(8 |
) |
Settlement of Decommissioning
Liabilities |
(41 |
) |
|
(48 |
) |
|
(27 |
) |
Principal Repayment of
Leases |
(76 |
) |
|
(70 |
) |
|
(75 |
) |
Acquisitions, Net of Cash
Acquired |
(4 |
) |
|
(465 |
) |
|
(1 |
) |
Proceeds From
Divestitures |
3 |
|
|
8 |
|
|
112 |
|
Payment on Divestiture of
Assets |
— |
|
|
— |
|
|
(50 |
) |
Excess Free Funds
Flow |
505 |
|
|
(499 |
) |
|
2,020 |
|
(1) Found in the June 30, 2023, or the March
31, 2023, interim Consolidated Financial Statements.
Cenovus Energy Inc.
Cenovus Energy Inc. is an integrated energy company with oil and
natural gas production operations in Canada and the Asia Pacific
region, and upgrading, refining and marketing operations in Canada
and the United States. The company is focused on managing its
assets in a safe, innovative and cost-efficient manner, integrating
environmental, social and governance considerations into its
business plans. Cenovus common shares and warrants are listed on
the Toronto and New York stock exchanges, and the company’s
preferred shares are listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange. For more
information, visit cenovus.com.
Find Cenovus on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube and
Instagram.
Cenovus contacts
Investors |
Media |
Investor Relations general line403-766-7711 |
Media Relations general line403-766-7751 |
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