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More than 20,000 jobs on the line as Canada’s oil drilling rig fleet shrinks

Three of every four rigs in Canada are sitting idle this February, normally the busiest time of the year, as drilling falls to 30-year lows.

Towering bone-dry oil derricks, idled drilling rigs and rows of unused trucks line the commercial yards on the outskirts of Edmonton. Years back, these yards could be empty in February, that is prime here we are at crews of roughnecks along with other workers to be in the oilfields of rural Alberta drilling for crude.

People in the drilling industry frequently call the busiest season – in the tail end of December through to March – “100 times of hell,” but this year it might be better referred to as 100 days of boredom. Drilling activity in Canada has fallen to 30-year lows, said Western Energy Services Corp. chief executive Alex MacAusland during an earnings ask Friday.

Three of every four drilling rigs in Canada are sitting idle so far in February, and analysts believe the yards will stay full in the future as more service companies idle, retire or try to sell equipment that isn’t in use.

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