By Ross Kelly 
 

SYDNEY--WorleyParsons Ltd. (WOR.AU) shares plunged after the Australian engineering contractor warned on profits, citing delays to the rollout of new energy projects by key customers like Total SA (TOT) and Suncor Energy Inc. (SU.T).

More than US$1 billion of WorleyParsons's market value was erased Wednesday after its second earnings downgrade this year. The company blamed the latest profit warning in large part on the deferral of Canadian oil-sands projects, which are under pressure from a glut of cheap competing supplies of natural gas and oil produced from U.S. shale rock.

WorleyParsons, based in Perth, said it expected annual net profit of between 260 million Australian dollars (US$246 million) and A$300 million, where previous guidance was for a figure higher than the prior year's A$322 million. Its shares fell 26% in Sydney after the company said earnings in the first half of the fiscal year through June may be as low as A$90 million--inviting scepticism as to whether it would reach even the downgraded annual target.

"The market's saying we don't believe you and we're going to take you to the cleaners until you release your first-half results," said Brad King, a Melbourne-based fund manager at Armytage Capital, which sold down its entire interest in WorleyParsons earlier this year. "Certainly, they've been out in the dog box and they're not coming out for a while."

Oil sands, an unconventional fuel source commonly found in Canada, contain a thick and sticky form of oil that can be difficult and expensive to extract compared with other types like U.S. shale gas, which is growing in popularity because of its relative cheapness to consumers. Earlier this year, WorleyParsons won contracts for Canadian oil-sands projects such as MacKay River, Joslyn North and Fort Hills from companies including Suncor and Total.

"The Canadian business continues to be impacted by major project deferrals," WorleyParsons said in a statement, adding that its Australian business would also suffer from a slowdown in energy-sector investment in the country's coal-rich Queensland state.

WorleyParsons has faced further pressure from a broader slowdown in mining investment as Australia's decadelong resources boom cools.

Chief Executive Andrew Wood told reporters Wednesday that the contractor expected some of the stalled oil-sands projects to be revived next year.

"We've had a number of contract wins and we expect they will support the outlook in the second half and beyond, but they haven't ramped up as fast as we'd expected," Mr. Wood said.

He pointed to Suncor's decision last month to start work on its long-delayed Fort Hills mine. Also last month, Royal Dutch Shell PLC (RDSA) said it planned to move ahead with its Cameron Creek project in Canada, a further sign that the oil-sands industry is still seen as viable.

In May, WorleyParsons downgraded its profit guidance for the financial year just ended, saying it was caught off guard by the slowdown in investment Australia's mining sector.

Revenue has been shielded to some degree because of the company's far greater exposure to the energy industry-which has been supported by Asia's demand for cleaner-burning fuel such as liquefied natural gas, or LNG. Still, many Australian LNG producers are putting expansion plans on hold too amid growing competition from North America supplies.

-Write to Ross Kelly at ross.kelly@wsj.com

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