Precision Drilling Q3 revenue up more than 50% from year ago as drilling ramps up

0
197

Precision Drilling Corp. says it lost $38 million in its latest quarter as drilling ramped up and revenue rose more than 50 per cent compared with a year ago.

The Calgary-based company says the loss amounted to $2.86 per diluted share for the year ended Sept. 30, compared with a loss of $28.5 million or $2.08 per diluted share in the same quarter last year.

Read more:
‘We’ve got open doors’: Texas lures Western Canadian businesses south

Revenue totalled $253.8 million in the company’s third quarter, up from $164.8 million a year earlier.

Precision, which is the largest drilling rig contractor in the country, says on average it had 51 active drilling rigs in Canada in the quarter, up from 18 in the same quarter last year.

Story continues below advertisement


Click to play video: 'Will Alberta start seeing more future trades workers?'



1:59
Will Alberta start seeing more future trades workers?


Will Alberta start seeing more future trades workers? – Oct 7, 2021

In the U.S., the company had on average 41 active drilling rigs in the quarter, up from 21 a year earlier, while its international drilling business averaged six rigs, the same as a year ago.

Read more:
Precision Drilling posts $75.9M loss in 2nd quarter despite better outlook

In its outlook, Precision says that at current commodity prices it expects higher demand for its services and improved fleet utilization as customers look to maintain and replenish production levels.

“We believe current industry fundamentals are providing the most promising backdrop for our business that we have experienced in almost a decade,” Precision CEO Kevin Neveu said in a statement.

“Strong oil and natural gas prices, a significantly improved Canadian market structure and rapidly declining drilled but uncompleted well inventories all point to higher drilling activity in our core markets.”

Story continues below advertisement

“Although we are likely in the early innings, our firm bookings and current customer inquiries indicate substantially stronger demand for our services and improved fleet utilization as this rebound continues.”

Read more:
Shortage of rig workers could slow Canadian oilpatch recovery, industry warns

© 2021 The Canadian Press