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CORPORATE PRESENTATION DECEMBER 2020

Corporate Presentation - PrairieSky...1 PrairieSky Royalty Snapshot (1) Based on 223.3 million common shares as of September 30, 2020 and closing share price on the TSX of $10.31 on

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  • CORPORATE PRESENTATION

    DECEMBER 2020

  • 1

    PrairieSky Royalty Snapshot

    (1) Based on 223.3 million common shares as of September 30, 2020 and closing share price on the TSX of $10.31 on November 30, 2020.Financial data in this corporate presentation is as at September 30, 2020 unless stated otherwise.

    TSX

    PSK$2.3 Billion Enterprise Value(1)

    Quarterly Dividend

    $0.06 Per Common Share Commencing Q2 2020

    223.3 Million Shares Outstanding(1)

    7.8 MillionAcres of Fee Lands

    7.7 MillionAcres of GORR Lands

    4Provinces

    Balance Sheet

    Strength

    NCIB One of the only North American energy companies continuing to repurchase shares

  • 2

    Dominant Land Position

  • 3

    Introduction to PrairieSky Royalty

    7.8 million acres of Fee Lands(1)

    7.7 million acres of GORR Lands(1)

    Lands located throughout the heart of the oil and gas producing basins in Alberta, British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Manitoba

    License to ~13,000 km2 of 3D seismic covering 3.3 million acres, and ~46,000 km of 2D seismic

    Business model supports dividend payments

    Operating margin(2) of 99%Operating netback(2) of 86%

    Strong balance sheet

    Low risk revenue base

    No capital commitments,operating costs, abandonment liabilitiesor reclamation charges associated withworking interest ownership

    ~63% of royalty production revenue received from Fee Lands(3)

    Experienced team aligned with shareholder interests

    Management team with an unparalleled understanding of the value of royalties

    Technical team with deep experiencein Western Canada

    Focused staff, all of whom have investedin PrairieSky shares

    Directors and officers ownership of 2.5 million shares

    (1) Fee Lands refer to lands with Petroleum and/or Natural Gas rights. GORR Lands include GRT and Crown Interest Lands.(2) For the nine months ended September 30, 2020. Operating margin represents royalty revenue less production & mineral tax expense. Operating netback represents operating margin

    less G&A expense.(3) For the nine months ended September 30, 2020.

  • 4

    A Unique and Diversified Approach to Investing in Oil & Gas

    Third PartyOperators

    GeologyCommodity• 77% of product revenue derived

    from liquids volumes(1)

    • Liquids volumes make up approximately 49% of production(1)

    • Production from over 30 formations from high risk, deep targets to low risk shallow oil and natural gas

    • 310 lessees paying royalties on PrairieSky Royalty lands

    • Operators on PrairieSky Royalty Fee Lands include Majors, Independents, Mid Cap and Small Cap producers

    (1) For the nine months ended September 30, 2020.

  • 5

    Royalty Advantage

    Ownership in PrairieSky provides a long duration cash flow stream and the optionality associated with perpetual land title ownership.

    Exposure to: No exposure to:High margin cash flow streams Capital costs

    New discovery/exploration optionality Environmental liabilities

    Commodity price optionality Operations

    Secondary and tertiary recoveries Operating costs

    Shale opportunities

    Technological advancements

    Ownership in 10 million leasable, undeveloped acres

  • 6

    Higher Margin, Lower Risk

    (1) Excludes the impact of Other Revenues (lease rentals, bonus consideration, etc.) for the nine months ended September 30, 2020.(2) Excluding acquisitions and net change in future development capital.(3) Operating margin is calculated as average realized price ($/boe), less Production & Mineral Tax expense ($/boe), divided by the

    average realized price ($/boe). Amounts per boe for PrairieSky Royalty are for the nine months ended September 30, 2020.

    Margin Summary ($/BOE)

    Illustrative Working Interest Operator PrairieSky Royalty

    PrairieSky Royalty offers higher margins than conventional working interest production

    Providing the same revenue per boe, a royalty barrel realizes significantly higher margins than working interest models

    No abandonment or environmental liabilities

    No capital spending requirements

    Incurred by Working Interest

    Operators

    Operating Margin (Excluding F&D)

    Revenue (49% Liquids Production)(1)

    $20.71/boe

    Operating / Transportation Costs

    ($10.75/BOE)

    F&D(2)($10.00/BOE)

    $7.36/BOE36% of Revenue before F&D

    Operating Margin(3)

    $20.42/BOE99%

    of Revenue

    Production & Mineral Tax($0.29/BOE)

    No royalties payable to the Crown on Fee Lands

    Royalties($2.60/BOE)

  • 7

    Recycling the Land Base

    New drilling and production technologies can be utilized to pursue previously underexploited zones

    The perpetual nature of Fee Lands allows PrairieSky Royalty to continually recycle lands and grow its revenue base.

    PrairieSky leases lands by zone – same aerial acreage can be leased separately for multiple zones

    At the end of the primary lease term, any lands/rights not held by production revert back to PrairieSky Royalty

    PrairieSky Royalty can re-lease to third parties who plan to more actively exploit, explore and/or develop those opportunities

    License to ~13,000 km2 of 3D seismic, covering over 3.3 million acres, and ~46,000 km of 2D seismic

    (1) Held by Production (“HBP”)

    PrairieSky Royalty sets lease terms to ensure the company remains competitive with adjacent Crown or freehold lands

  • 8

    Production History on our Fee Lands

    Additional royalty production is generated on GORR Lands (not included above).

    Historical Gross Production on PSK Fee Lands

    Source: Accumap

    Cumulative production of 4.4 billion BOE

    -

    50,000

    100,000

    150,000

    200,000

    250,000

    300,000

    CD Avg. Oil (bbl/d) CD Avg. Gas (Boe/d)

  • Reserves Replacement

    Third-party capital on PrairieSky lands approximately replaces production annually.

    In 2019, replaced 119% of oil royalty production volumes and 151% of NGL royalty production volumes.

    9

    Proved + Probable Reserves

    (MBOE)

    Annual Production

    (MBOE)

    Funds from Operations

    (millions)

    2015 46,653 6,199 $177.8

    2016 47,423 8,531 $200.2

    2017 49,234 9,221 $290.2

    2018 47,482 8,526 $229.7

    2019 45,835 7,941 $220.4

    Funds from operations returned to shareholders as dividends and share repurchases or used to purchase additional royalty interests.

  • Long-term Optionality

    PrairieSky’s basket of call options includes:

    = Long-term liquids growth at no additional cost to PrairieSky.

    10

    SAGDLindbergh and Onion Lake projects have multiple phase expansion potentialNew leasing of Fee Lands to integrated and independent SAGD specialists

    Emerging Clearwater and Duvernay oil plays; stacked Montney and Spirit River liquids rich gas plays

    Large scale CO2 sequestration and EOR projects

    New pool discoveries and expansion of productive trends

    Technological advancements

  • 11

    PrairieSky Royalty Per Share Metrics

    (1)Acres per share based on number of common shares outstandingat September 30, 2020.

    -

    20

    40

    60

    80

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    120

    140

    2013

    Q1/

    14Q

    2/14

    Q3/

    14Q

    4/14

    Q1/

    15Q

    2/15

    Q3/

    15Q

    4/15

    Q1/

    16Q

    2/16

    Q3/

    16Q

    4/16

    Q1/

    17Q

    2/17

    Q3/

    17Q

    4/17

    Q1/

    18Q

    2/18

    Q3/

    18Q

    4/18

    Q1/

    19Q

    2/19

    Q3/

    19Q

    4/19

    Q1/

    20Q

    2/20

    Q3/

    20

    Production per Million Shares

    Production per Share

    -

    20,000

    40,000

    60,000

    80,000

    IPO Today

    Acres per Million Shares(1)

  • 12

    Revenues Generated from Royalty Properties

    PrairieSky generates revenues through leasing its Fee Lands and its GORR Interests, which includes Royalty Production Revenue, Bonus Consideration and Lease Rental Income.

    Compliance revenue is recorded with Royalty Production Revenue from Fee Lands and GORR Interests in the financial statements.YTD 2020 is for the nine months ended September 30, 2020.

    Royalty Compliance analysis focuses on capturing mispaid royalties through forensic accounting.

    Over $60 million in compliance recoveries collected since IPO.

    $-

    $50

    $100

    $150

    $200

    $250

    $300

    $350

    $400

    2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 YTD 2020

    Rev

    enue

    s ($

    milli

    ons)

    Total Revenues

    Royalty Production Revenue from Lessor Interests on Fee Lands Royalty Production Revenue from GORR Interests Bonus Consideration Lease Rental Income Other Income

  • 13

    Returns to Shareholders

    From IPO to September 30, 2020, PrairieSky has returned $1.1billion in dividends and $224million in share buybacks to shareholders.

    The dividend is below the current, trailing and forward Free Cash Flow yield.

    PrairieSky pays a quarterly dividend of $0.06 per share.

    High conversion of revenues to free cash flow for distribution to shareholders through all commodity price cycles.

    -

    0.2

    0.4

    0.6

    0.8

    1.0

    1.2

    1.4

    1.6

    1.8

    IPO (May 29, 2014) - September 30, 2020

    $ bi

    llions

    Total Revenue Funds from Operations Returned to Shareholders

    WTI down ~57%

    AECO down~52%

  • 14

    Capital-Free Returns and Diversification

    PrairieSky Royalty E&Ps Midstream

    Capital-Free Returns No capital investment required Future embedded royalties

    and cash flow through perpetual land ownership

    No environmental liabilities typically associated with working interests

    Technology increases recovery factors and opens up new resource opportunities

    x Requires significant capital or acquisitions for growth

    x Responsibility for environmental liabilities

    Technology increases recovery factors and opens up new resource opportunities

    x Requires significant capital for growth

    x Requires significant capital for maintenance

    x Responsibility for environmental liabilities

    Stable/Diversified Asset 15.5 million acres, approximately 38,000 producing wells, approximately 310 payors

    / x Generally concentrated incertain plays (operator/asset)

    x Requires maintenance and facilities capital

    Contractual commitments (certainty of fees, volumes)

    Capital Structure Minor working capital deficiency. No long-term debt

    x Moderate to high leverage x Moderate to high leverage

  • 15

    ESG Policies and Practices

    Environmental regulations are best-in-class standards and reflect global leadership

    Focus on Health and Safety, Human Rights and Community Partnerships

    Technological Innovation and leading commitment to sustainability, driving rapid rate of change and continuous improvement.

    All of PrairieSky’s royalty properties are in Canada which provides the following advantages:

    PrairieSky has no field operations, facilities, or end of life decommissioning liabilities.

    Third-party operators on the Royalty Properties have a contractual commitment to adhere to good operating practices and comply with all laws.

    PrairieSky is advancing further sustainability initiatives and continues to increase disclosure around ESG.

    2019 Responsibility Report available on our websiteIndependent assurance statement of certain key performance indicators available on our website“Net zero” GHG emissions (Scope 1 and Scope 2)

    PrairieSky’s policies and practices are developed to provide the foundation for sustainability. They include:

    Code of Business Conduct

    Environment, Climate Change, Health & Safety Policy

    Human Rights Policy

    Board Diversity Policy

    Whistleblower Policy

    Please see our website for a full list of policies: www.prairiesky.com

    Policies and Practices

    http://www.prairiesky.com/

  • 16

    ESG Policies and Practices

    Ranked #1 by Sustainalytics for Global Oil and Gas Producers and in 12th Percentile for Global Universe.

    Received A ranking from MSCI in 2020.Ranked #1 by ISS QualityScore on Environment, #2 on Social.Received a A- score for CDP Climate Change in 2020, which is the leadership level.

    ESG Survey Results

    GovernanceThe Globe and Mail, Report on Business Board Games - PrairieSky ranked in the top quartile of Canadian companies in 2020, achieving a score of 88/100 (ranked #41) for excellence in governance practices.

    Recipient of 2020 “Women Lead Here” recognition

    At PrairieSky, women make up:

    75% of Managers, 50% of Senior Management and 29% of Independent Directors

    We are committed to operating our business in an economically, socially, and environmentally responsible and sustainable manner for the benefit of shareholders and relevant stakeholders.

    We conduct our business responsibly by:• Incorporating sustainability factors into our

    strategy and actively managing risk.• Proactively taking steps to minimize our

    impact on the environment.• Emphasizing sustainability criteria through

    our business relationships and contractual arrangements.

    • Upholding the highest standards of governance and ethics.

    • Tying short-term and long-term Executive Compensation to measurable ESG performance criteria.

    Gender Diversity

  • 17

    Shareholder Alignment

    Board & Management invested ~$80 million

    in PSK Shares

    Decisions focused on core strategy and

    creating long-term shareholder value

    ShareholderAlignment“Pay for performance” long-term incentives

    All staff are shareholdersand maximize participation

    in Employee Stock Purchase Plan

  • Spuds on PrairieSky Lands – Q3 2020

    18

  • Spuds on PrairieSky Lands – YTD 2020

    19

  • 20

    Quarterly Activity on PrairieSky Lands

    *Wells on production for Q3 2020 will be reported in Q4 2020 when data is complete.LOR represents lessor interests on Fee Lands.RI - royalty interest

    There was limited drilling and exploration activity across Western Canada during Q2 & Q3 2020 due to the impacts of decreased benchmark pricing and COVID-19 on global oil supply and demand. During Q2 2020, there were no wells spud on PrairieSky lands.

    0

    100

    200

    300

    2017Q1

    2017Q2

    2017Q3

    2017Q4

    2018Q1

    2018Q2

    2018Q3

    2018Q4

    2019Q1

    2019Q2

    2019Q3

    2019Q4

    2020Q1

    2020Q2

    2020Q3

    Wells Spud

    LOR GORR UNIT

    0.0%

    5.0%

    10.0%

    15.0%

    0

    100

    200

    300

    2017Q1

    2017Q2

    2017Q3

    2017Q4

    2018Q1

    2018Q2

    2018Q3

    2018Q4

    2019Q1

    2019Q2

    2019Q3

    2019Q4

    2020Q1

    2020Q2

    2020Q3

    Wells Spud

    OIL GAS RI

    0

    100

    200

    300

    2017Q1

    2017Q2

    2017Q3

    2017Q4

    2018Q1

    2018Q2

    2018Q3

    2018Q4

    2019Q1

    2019Q2

    2019Q3

    2019Q4

    2020Q1

    2020Q2

    2020Q3

    Wells Rig Released

    LOR GORR UNIT

    0.0%

    5.0%

    10.0%

    15.0%

    0

    100

    200

    300

    2017Q1

    2017Q2

    2017Q3

    2017Q4

    2018Q1

    2018Q2

    2018Q3

    2018Q4

    2019Q1

    2019Q2

    2019Q3

    2019Q4

    2020Q1

    2020Q2

    2020Q3

    Wells Rig Released

    OIL GAS RI

    050

    100150200250300

    2017Q1

    2017Q2

    2017Q3

    2017Q4

    2018Q1

    2018Q2

    2018Q3

    2018Q4

    2019Q1

    2019Q2

    2019Q3

    2019Q4

    2020Q1

    2020Q2

    Wells on Production*

    LOR GORR UNIT

    0.0%2.0%4.0%6.0%8.0%10.0%12.0%

    050

    100150200250300

    2017Q1

    2017Q2

    2017Q3

    2017Q4

    2018Q1

    2018Q2

    2018Q3

    2018Q4

    2019Q1

    2019Q2

    2019Q3

    2019Q4

    2020Q1

    2020Q2

    Wells On Production*

    OIL GAS RI

  • 10 Year Free Cash Flow Generation

    21

    FX($US / $CAD)

    AECO($/Mcf)

    WTI($/bbl)

    10 Year Average Annual Production (boe/d)

    18,000 20,000 22,000 24,000

    10 Year Free Cash Flow (Billions)

    % Annual Growth Rate ~-2.5% ~-1.0% Flat ~2%

    0.73 $2.00 $30.00 $1.0 $1.1 $1.2 $1.3

    0.73 $2.00 $40.00 $1.3 $1.5 $1.6 $1.7

    0.73 $2.00 $50.00 $1.6 $1.8 $1.9 $2.0

    0.73 $2.00 $60.00 $1.9 $2.1 $2.3 $2.4

    0.73 $2.00 $70.00 $2.2 $2.4 $2.6 $2.8

    2019 Average Royalty Production 21,601 BOE/d

    A $0.50/Mcf increase in AECO, increases 10-year cash flow by $0.1 billion.

  • 22

    Why PrairieSky?

    • 7.8 million acres of Fee Lands• 7.7 million acres of GORR LandsVast Land Base

    • Management and directors with an unparalleled understanding of the royalty business and are invested alongside shareholdersExperienced Team

    • Upside from resource play development on emerging including the East Shale Duvernay, Clearwater and multi-zonal Deep Basin plays

    Resource Play Upside

    • Approximately 310 lessees producing from over 30 geologic horizons• Exposure to both oil and natural gas prices

    Diversification

    • Technology, new pool discoveries, optimization of legacy production and secondary and tertiary recoveries all provide long-term option value

    • Fee Simple land never expiresOptionality

    • Conservative dividend payout ratio• No capital expenditures, operating costs, abandonment or environmental

    liabilities• Strong balance sheet

    Sustainability

    • Trading at attractive FCF yield, no capital requirements to maintain current free cash flow generation

    Attractive Free Cash Flow Yield

  • FINANCIALINFORMATION

  • 24

    Financial Highlights

    $millions, unless otherwise noted Q3 2020 Q2 2020 Q1 2020 Q4 2019 Q3 2019 Q2 2019Year Ended December 31,

    2019 2018

    Production Volumes

    Crude Oil (bbls/d) 6,572 6,035 8,582 8,884 8,011 8,740 8,633 9,004

    NGLs (bbls/d) 2,473 2,586 2,945 2,819 2,334 2,690 2,607 2,463

    Natural Gas (Mmcf/d) 58.2 60.3 63.8 63.0 61.0 65.2 63.1 71.3

    Total Production (BOE/d)(1) 18,745 18,671 22,160 22,203 20,512 22,297 21,757 23,358

    Financial Information

    Royalty Production Revenue 38.4 25.1 49.1 63.4 51.9 63.1 244.9 248.0

    Other Revenues 5.1 3.1 3.6 3.7 6.9 6.2 23.5 25.8

    Total Revenues 43.5 28.2 52.7 67.1 58.8 69.3 268.4 273.8

    Funds from Operations 37.9 21.3 46.5 55.8 48.8 58.0 220.4 229.7

    per Share(2) $0.16 $0.09 $0.20 $0.24 $0.21 $0.25 $0.94 $0.98

    per BOE $21.98 $12.53 $23.06 $27.32 $25.86 $28.59 27.75 $26.94

    Net Earnings 9.4 (0.4) 8.6 24.3 16.7 44.0 111.4 79.4

    per Share $0.04 ($0.00) $0.04 $0.10 $0.07 $0.19 $0.48 $0.34

    Working Capital at Period End (66.2) (8.7) (5.2) (3.1) (7.4) (2.1) (3.1) (10.4)

    (1) See “Conversions of Natural Gas to boe”.(2) Per share calculation uses the weighted average (basic) number of shares outstanding.

    PrairieSky has no long-term debt, no operating expenses, no mandatory capital expenditures and no environmental liabilities.

  • 25

    Top Payors

    Exposure to various operators with diverse expertise ranging from private companies to Majors

    12 months of Revenue by Top 25 Companies ($ millions)

    Top25 Payors

    Top 10 payors represent 49%of product revenue, while the Top 25 payors represent 71%of product revenue

    Artis Exploration Pacific Canbriam EnergyBaytex Energy Persist Oil And Gas Inc.Bonavista Energy Pine Cliff EnergyCenovus Energy Spur PetroleumCanadian Natural Resources Strathcona ResourcesCrescent Point Tamarack ValleyEmber Resources TAQA NorthIPC Canada Ltd. Teine EnergyKarve Energy Tourmaline OilLynx Energy Venturion OilNAL Resources Vesta EnergyNuvista Energy Whitecap ResourcesOvintiv Inc.0.0 2.0 4.0 6.0 8.0 10.0 12.0 14.0 16.0

    123456789

    10111213141516171819202122232425

  • APPENDICES

  • HIGH QUALITY ROYALTIES = OPTIONALITY

  • FUTURE OPTIONALITY

    28

  • INDUSTRY CAPITAL ON PSK LANDS

    Third-party operators invest capital on PrairieSky’s lands to develop and produce oil and natural gas.

    29

    2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019Industry Capital(1) (billions) $46.9 $31.6 $23.0 $28.7 $27.4 $25.3

    Gross Capital on PSK Lands(2) (billions) $1.9 $1.1 $0.7 $1.1 $1.3 $1.1

    % of Gross Capital on PSK Lands 4.1% 3.5% 3.2% 4.0% 4.7% 4.3%

    % of Gross Capital Oil Plays 72% 52% 69% 73% 78% 74%

    % of Gross Wells on Oil Plays 74% 73% 90% 89% 94% 94%

    Net Capital(2) (millions) $176 $84 $68 $74 $75 $58

    Source: Arc Energy Charts (July 6, 2020). Represents total capital spent on conventional oil and natural gas in Canada.(1) Includes capital spending on oil sands. Gross capital represents the capital investment by a third-party operator. Net capital represents the gross capital multiplied by

    the PSK net royalty interest.

  • 30

    Multi-Zone Potential

    Exploration and development has taken place since the 1950s in the form of new pool discoveries as well as through redevelopment with evolving technology

    1970’sHoadley Barrier

    Glauc Gas

    1980’sGlauc Gas, Banff,

    Pekisko and Ellerslie Oil

    1950’sHomeglen Rimbey

    Leduc Oil

    1960’sNordegg Natural

    Gas

    1990’sPekisko Oil, Leduc Oil

    Infill, Glauc Oil

    2000’sGlauc Oil and Gas,

    first horizontal wells, CBM

    Post 2010Glauc Oil and Gas,

    multi-stage fracs, Leduc Infill

    FutureDuvernay, Banff

    horizontal, Nordegg, Ellerslie, Upper

    Mannville

  • 31

    Saskatchewan Viking Continues to Attract Capital

    Saskatchewan Viking remains a key play for many producers based on superior economics, short cycle times and low capital requirements

    < $1 million to bring well on-stream and quick payouts

    Wells produce > 50years

    Over 10 Mmboe of oil in place per section

    ~100 miles

  • 32

    Development of an Economic Resource Play Saskatchewan Viking

    Wells Drilled Before 20102,650 vertical wells drilled (in this map area)36 horizontal wells drilledHorizontal lateral length 1 mile or 0.5 mileDrilling density 4 to 8 wells per sectionMost wells target vertical well development areas

    Wells Drilled as of January 2013800 total horizontal wells drilledHorizontal lateral length mostly 0.5 milesDrilling Density 8 to 16 wells per sectionDevelopment extends vertical pool boundaries

    Wells Drilled as of September 20202,986 total horizontal wells drilledHorizontal lateral length 0.5 to 1.5 mileDrilling density 16 to 28 wells per sectionDevelopment is delineating new pool boundaries

    PrairieSky Inventory Based on:

    16 wellsper section in infill sections

    8 wellsper section in offset sections

  • 33

    Central Alberta Duvernay

    ~900,000 acres of royalty landsin the oil and volatile oil window ofan emerging shale resource play.

    Duvernay is in early stages of contributing to PrairieSky’s revenues:

    Potential for significant royalty production growth.

    Trailing 12-month production averaged royalty production of ~320 BOE/d,up from 20 BOE/din 2016.

  • 34

    Alberta Viking – Growth in Activity

    Activity has grown in the Alberta Viking representing ~25% of Viking activity from 2017-2020 versus 3% in 2016.

    ~240 miles

    0

    2,000

    4,000

    6,000

    8,000

    10,000

    12,000

    14,000

    16,000

    2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020

    Gro

    ss O

    il Pr

    oduc

    tion

    (bbl

    /d)

    Production on PrairieSky Lands

    pre-2014 RR 2014 RR 2015 RR 2016 RR 2017 RR 2018 RR 2019 RR

  • 35

    Investing in Future Growth Opportunities

    Over 850,000acres in Marten Hills, Godin, Nipisi and Ukalta(1)areas.

    An emerging capital efficient oil play, with scale and large OOIP reservoirs in the Clearwatergroup sands.

    PrairieSky has re-invested its cash lease bonus consideration into new emerging oil resource play opportunities to provide liquids growth in the medium to long term.

    (1)Ukalta not shown on map

  • 36

    Upper Montney Light Oil Exposure

    GORR on ~110 sectionsof prospective Upper Montney light oil lands in Two Rivers region of British Columbia

    PrairieSky will benefit from future development of play without capital expenditures, operating costs or abandonment and environmental liabilities

    0 6 Miles

  • 37

    Enhanced Oil Recovery

    Unit on single section of land first started producing in 1979

    Production has increased dramatically with EOR scheme, delivering ~$42,000 per month in royalty revenue over the 12-month trailing period.

    0 1Mile

    0

    200

    400

    600

    800

    1,000

    1,200

    1,400

    1,600

    1978 1983 1988 1993 1998 2003 2008 2013 2018

    Gro

    ss O

    il Pr

    oduc

    tion

    (bbl

    /d)

  • 38

    Multi-Zoned, Prolific Spirit River Exposure

    Horizontal drilling and improved completion techniques have resulted in improved drilling results

    IPs, EURs and costs make the Spirit River competitivewith the Marcellus and Utica

    Well capitalized operators

    0 24 Miles

    -

    5,000

    10,000

    15,000

    20,000

    25,000

    30,000

    35,000

    2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020

    Gro

    ss P

    rodu

    ctio

    n (b

    oe/d

    )

    Spirit River Royalty HZ Production on GORR Lands

    Pre-2011 RR 2011 RR 2012 RR 2013 RR 2014 RR2015 RR 2016 RR 2017 RR 2018 RR 2019 RR

  • 39

    Legacy Production

    Unit was discovered in 1956 and developed vertically until 1965

    Placed under a partial waterflood in 2003

    Operator has an inventory of

    166 net wells, 93 are booked locations(1)

    First horizontal well drilled in 2011, 51 drilled to date (35 in 2012)

    (1) Inventory as of December 31, 2017, inventory not disclosed subsequently.

    0

    500

    1,000

    1,500

    2,000

    2,500

    3,000

    2000 2005 2010 2015 2020

    Gro

    ss P

    rodu

    ctio

    n (b

    oe/d

    )

  • 40

    Technology

    Unit started producing in the 1950s.

    Horizontal, multi-stage fracture development started in ~2012 increasing production to levels not seen since the 1960s.

    Increased horizontal drilling activity on a number of units across PrairieSky lands.

    Provides significant development opportunity.

    -

    2,000

    4,000

    6,000

    8,000

    10,000

    12,000

    1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020

    Gro

    ss O

    il Pr

    oduc

    tion

    (bbl

    /d)

  • 41

    New Pool Discovery and Development

    The pool encompasses 32 sections of Fee Land, currently under natural gas flood

    Production began in early 2012 and reached peak production of over 4,000 bbls/d

    Over $100 million in royalty production revenue on this pool since 2012

    0

    500

    1,000

    1,500

    2,000

    2,500

    3,000

    3,500

    4,000

    4,500

    2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020

    Gro

    ss O

    il Pr

    oduc

    tion

    (bbl

    /d)

  • UNDERSTANDINGROYALTIES

  • 43

    History of PrairieSky’s Fee Lands

    1676King Charles II of England granted 948 million acres of mineral title land to the Hudson’s Bay Company, later ceded to the Dominion of Canada.

    1958CPR creates Canadian Pacific Oil and Gas, to which all mineral title was conveyed.

    1971PanCanadian Petroleum Limited (predecessor to PanCanadian Energy Corporation) created by the amalgamation of Canadian Pacific Oil and Gas And Central –Del Rio Oils.

    2002Encana created through merger of PanCanadian Energy Corporation and Alberta Energy Company.

    2014PrairieSky Royalty acquires fees simple mineral title lands from Encana and completes initial public offering.

    1887Dominion of Canada stops granting mines and mineral rights as part of land sales –no more Fee lands are created.

    PresentPrairieSky is the largest fee simple mineral title landowner in Western Canada, including 7.8 million acres of Fee Simple Mineral Title lands with petroleum and/or natural gas rights. These rights are held in perpetuity.

    2014PrairieSky completes acquisition of Range Royalty Limited Partnership in December 2014, a best in class private royalty company with 3.5 million acres of royalty lands.

    2015PrairieSky acquires substantially all of Canadian Natural Resources royalty assets, gaining unparalleled fee simple mineral title exposure in the Viking light oil play in Western Saskatchewan and royalty interests in multiple resource plays in the Deep Basin of Alberta and British Columbia.

    1905CPR initiates irrigation projects, checkerboard selection abandoned in exchange for building a large irrigation system.

    1881 25 million acres of Fee lands granted to the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) in consideration for completing the national railway.

    CPR able to select lands from the odd numbered sections in a belt of land 24 miles wide on each side of the railway creating the checkerboard pattern still seen today.

  • 44

    Types of Royalties

    The following figure outlines the royalty hierarchy. As you move down the royalty hierarchy, costs increase andduration decreases.

    Crown Royalties

    Fee Simple Mineral Title -PrairieSky owns 7.8 million acres

    Gross Overriding Royalties -PrairieSky owns 7.7 million acres

    Streams

    Net Profit Interest

    Volumetric Production Payment

    Working Interest

  • 45

    Active Management of Land Base

    PrairieSky actively manages its Fee Lands:

    PrairieSky’s Seismic CoverageMeeting with operators and providing updates on available lands

    Providing seismic to lessors and generating prospects internally

    Posting prospects on PrairieSky’s website and advertising to industry

    Proactively monitoring and managing producer commitments

    License to ~13,000 km2 of 3D seismic over 3.3 million acres & ~46,000 km of 2D seismic

  • 46

    Leadership Team

    Executive Team

    Board of DirectorsJames M. Estey, Chair of the BoardCorporate Director, Retired Chairman of UBS Securities Canada Inc., and has more than 30 years of experience in financial marketsChairman of Gibson Energy Inc.

    Andrew M. Phillips, President & CEO / Director

    P. Jane Gavan President, Asset Management of Dream Unlimited Corp.More than 30 years of executive business and leadership experience, including acting as a senior legal advisor. Currently sits on the Board of Directors of Dream Unlimited Corp., Colliers International and on the Board of Trustees of Dream Global REIT.

    Margaret A. McKenzieCorporate Director, Former VP, Finance and Chief Financial Officer of Range Royalty and prior thereto was VP, Finance and Chief Financial Officer of Profico Energy Management Ltd.Director of CN, Ovintiv Inc. and Inter Pipeline Ltd.

    Myron M. StadnykCorporate Director, Former President & Chief Executive Officer and Director of ARC Resources Ltd. Director of Crescent Point Energy Corp.

    Sheldon SteevesCorporate Director, Previously President & CEO of EchoEx; Executive Vice President & COO at Renaissance Energy Ltd.Director of Enerplus Corporation and NuVista Energy Ltd.

    Senior leadership team offers unique expertise managing royalty assets, significant technical capabilities and broad, long-standing industry relationships.

    Andrew M. Phillips, President & CEO / DirectorPreviously, President, CEO & Director of Home Quarter Resources (acquired by a public oil and gas company in 2014)Extensive experience in the oil & gas industry with past senior roles at Profico Energy Management and Renaissance Energy

    Cameron M. Proctor, Chief Operating OfficerPreviously, EVP, Chief Legal Officer and Director of Sinopec Canada and prior thereto VP, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary of Daylight Energy Former lawyer with Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP

    Pamela Kazeil, VP Finance & Chief Financial OfficerPreviously, EVP and Chief Financial Officer of Sinopec Canada and prior thereto VP, Finance of Daylight Energy Formerly VP Finance of Sword Energy Ltd. and held increasingly senior roles at its predecessor, Thunder Energy Trust, including VP Finance and CFO

    Robert RobottiFounder and Chief Investment Officer Robotti & Company Advisors, LLCChair of Pulse Seismic Inc. and a director of AMREP Corporation

    Grant A. ZawalskyManaging Partner of Burnet, Duckworth & Palmer LLP (Barristers and Solicitors) Director of NuVista Energy Ltd. and Whitecap Resources Inc.

  • 47

    Disclaimer & Cautionary Statements

    Cautionary Statement on Forward Looking InformationThis presentation contains “forward looking information” and “forward looking statements” within the meaning of applicable securities laws, which may include, but are not limited to: statements with respectto future events or future performance; management’s expectations regarding PrairieSky’s growth and realization of future value from the Royalty Properties; results of operations of third parties active onthe Royalty Properties; expectations that the number of wells reported as on production in the current quarter will increase in the following quarter when data is updated; estimated future revenues; futuredividends and share buybacks; production estimates; costs and revenue; future demand for and prices of commodities; business prospects; future application of EOR schemes and other secondary andtertiary recovery methods to improve recovery factors on the Royalty Properties; expectations regarding downspacing and infill drilling; expectations regarding continued improvement in technology andapplication of new drilling and completion techniques, including application of horizontal drilling in areas otherwise largely delineated with vertical wells; expectations regarding ongoing and continued activitylevels on the Royalty Properties; estimated historical capital spent on the Royalty Properties and capital efficiencies related thereto, and future capital spend on the Royalty Properties; expectationsregarding new discoveries and the contribution to the reserves, production and financial results of the Company; expectations regarding historical and future optimization efforts on certain plays and theresulting effect on declines in production; PrairieSky’s ability to lease large amounts of land, and its corresponding ability to attract associated bonus consideration revenue and capital spent on the RoyaltyProperties; expectations that data from drilling activities will lead to exploitation of additional zones and substances that were not otherwise targeted; and expectations regarding the future development onthe Company’s lands, including the Duvernay and Clearwater land positions, including expectations that they will add significant growth to royalty revenue and production over time; and the prospectivity oflands that are not included in this presentation and the Company’s expectations regarding the same. Such forward looking statements reflect management’s current beliefs and are based on informationcurrently available to management. Often, but not always, forward looking statements can be identified by the use of words such as “plans”, “expects”, “is expected”, “budgets”, “scheduled”, “estimates”,“forecasts”, “predicts”, “projects”, “intends”, “targets”, “aims”, “anticipates” or “believes” or variations (including negative variations) of such words and phrases or may be identified by statements to theeffect that certain actions “may”, “could”, “should”, “would”, “might” or “will” be taken, occur or be achieved. Forward looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors,which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of PrairieSky to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-lookingstatements. A number of factors could cause actual events or results to differ materially from any forward looking statement, including, without limitation: fluctuations in the prices of crude oil, natural gasand NGL that drive royalty revenue; changes in national, provincial and local government legislation and regulations, including permitting and licensing regimes and taxation policies and the enforcementthereof; regulatory and political or economic developments in any of the jurisdictions where properties in which PrairieSky holds a royalty interest are located; risks related to the operators of the propertiesin which PrairieSky holds a royalty interest, including changes in the ownership and control of such operators; influence of macroeconomic developments; business opportunities that become available to,or are pursued by PrairieSky; reduced access to debt and equity capital; litigation; title, permit or license disputes related to interests on any of the properties in which PrairieSky holds a royalty interest;excessive cost escalation as well as development, permitting, infrastructure, operating or technical difficulties on any of the properties in which PrairieSky holds a royalty interest; actual hydrocarbon contentmay differ from the reserves and resources contained in technical reports; rate and timing of production differences from resource estimates and other technical reports; risks and hazards associated withthe business of exploration and development on any of the properties in which PrairieSky holds a royalty interest, including, but not limited to unusual or unexpected geological conditions, natural disasters,terrorism, civil unrest or a political change; and the integration of acquired assets. The statements contained in this presentation are based upon assumptions management believes to be reasonable,including, without limitation: the ongoing operation of the properties in which PrairieSky holds a royalty interest by the owners or operators of such properties in a manner consistent with good oilfieldpractices and all applicable regulations; the availability of capital to such operators to further develop such properties; the accuracy of public statements and disclosures made by the operators on theRoyalty Properties; no material adverse change in the market price of the commodities that underlie the asset portfolio; no material changes to existing tax treatment; no adverse development in respect ofany significant property in which PrairieSky holds a royalty interest; the accuracy of publicly disclosed expectations for the development of underlying properties that are not yet in production; integration ofacquired assets; the accuracy of assumptions and information used in PrairieSky’s internal assessments of its Royalty Properties and the prospectivity thereof, including with respect to acquired assets;and the absence of any other factors that could cause actions, events or results to differ from those anticipated, estimated or intended. However, there can be no assurance that forward-looking statementswill prove to be accurate, as actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements and investors are cautioned that forward looking statements are not guaranteesof future performance. PrairieSky cannot assure investors that actual results will be consistent with these forward-looking statements. Accordingly, investors should not place undue reliance on forwardlooking statements due to the inherent uncertainty therein. For additional information with respect to risks, uncertainties and assumptions, please refer to the “Risk Factors” section of our most recent AIFfiled with the Canadian securities regulatory authorities available at www.sedar.com and on our website at www.prairiesky.com. The forward-looking statements herein are made as of October 26, 2020only and PrairieSky does not assume any obligation to update or revise them to reflect new information, estimates or opinions, future events or results or otherwise, except as required by applicable law.

    Cautionary Statement Regarding Future-Oriented Financial InformationThis presentation also contains future-oriented financial information and financial outlook information (collectively, "FOFI") about our prospective results, funds from operations, future development of theRoyalty Properties, future drilling locations, future reserve additions and in each case values associated therewith, all of which are subject to the same assumptions, risk factors, limitations, andqualifications as set forth above. Readers are cautioned that the assumptions used in the preparation of such information, although considered reasonable at the time of preparation, may prove to beimprecise and, as such, undue reliance should not be placed on FOFI and forward-looking statements. PrairieSky’s actual results, performance, realization or achievement of anticipated values could differmaterially from those expressed in, or implied by, these forward-looking statements and FOFI, or if any of them do so, what benefits PrairieSky will derive therefrom. PrairieSky has included the forward-looking statements and FOFI in this presentation in order to provide readers with a more complete perspective on PrairieSky’s future value proposition and future development potential and suchinformation may not be appropriate for other purposes. PrairieSky disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements or FOFI, whether as a result of new information,future events or otherwise, except as required by law.

    http://www.sedar.com/http://www.prairiesky.com/

  • 48

    Other Disclosure

    NON-GAAP MEASURESCertain measures in this presentation do not have any standardized meaning as prescribed by IFRS and therefore, are considerednon-GAPP measures. These measures may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers. These measuresare commonly used in the oil and gas industry and by the Company to provide potential investors with additional informationregarding the Company’s liquidity and its ability to generate funds to finance its operations. This presentation includes thefollowing Non-GAAP measures: 1) Free Cash Flow which is defined as Funds from Operations, a GAAP measure used inPrairieSky’s unaudited interim condensed consolidated financial statements for the three and nine months ended September 30,2020; 2) Operating Netback which is defined in PrairieSky’s management discussion & analysis for the three and six monthsended September 30, 2020; and 3) Operating Margin which is PrairieSky’s royalty revenue less production and mineral taxes. Thismeasure is used to demonstrate the comparability between PrairieSky and production and exploration companies in the crude oiland natural gas industry as it shows the revenue generation from field operations. Further information on Non-GAAP measurescan be found in PrairieSky Royalty’s management discussion & analysis and unaudited interim condensed consolidated financialstatements and notes thereto for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2020, which are available on SEDAR atwww.sedar.com or PrairieSky Royalty’s website at www.prairiesky.com.

    CONVERSIONS OF NATURAL GAS TO BOETo provide a single unit of production for analytical purposes, natural gas production and reserves volumes are convertedmathematically to equivalent barrels of oil (boe). We use the industry-accepted standard conversion of six thousand cubic feet ofnatural gas to one barrel of oil (6 Mcf = 1 bbl). The 6:1 boe ratio is based on an energy equivalency conversion method primarilyapplicable at the burner tip. It does not represent a value equivalency at the wellhead and is not based on either energy content orcurrent prices. While the boe ratio is useful for comparative measures and observing trends, it does not accurately reflectindividual product values and might be misleading, particularly if used in isolation. As well, given that the value ratio, based on thecurrent price of crude oil to natural gas, is significantly different from the 6:1 energy equivalency ratio, using a 6:1 conversion ratiomay be misleading as an indication of value.

    CURRENCY AND REFERENCES TO PRAIRIESKY ROYALTYAll information included in this presentation is shown on a Canadian dollar basis.For convenience, references in this document to the “Company”, “we”, “us”, “our”, and “its” may, where applicable, refer only toPrairieSky Royalty.

    http://www.sedar.com/http://www.prairiesky.com/

  • PRAIRIESKY ROYALTY LTD.

    1700, 350 – 7 Avenue SWCalgary, AB T2P 3N9

    T 587.293.4000E [email protected]

    CONTACT INFORMATION

    WWW.PRAIRIESKY.COM

    CORPORATE PRESENTATIONPrairieSky Royalty SnapshotDominant Land PositionIntroduction to PrairieSky RoyaltyA Unique and Diversified Approach to Investing in Oil & GasRoyalty AdvantageHigher Margin, Lower RiskRecycling the Land BaseProduction History on our Fee LandsReserves ReplacementLong-term OptionalityPrairieSky Royalty Per Share MetricsRevenues Generated from Royalty PropertiesReturns to ShareholdersCapital-Free Returns and DiversificationESG Policies and PracticesESG Policies and PracticesShareholder AlignmentSpuds on PrairieSky Lands – Q3 2020Spuds on PrairieSky Lands – YTD 2020Quarterly Activity on PrairieSky Lands10 Year Free Cash Flow GenerationWhy PrairieSky?Slide Number 24Financial HighlightsTop PayorsSlide Number 27Slide Number 28FUTURE OPTIONALITYINDUSTRY CAPITAL ON PSK LANDSMulti-Zone PotentialSaskatchewan Viking Continues to Attract CapitalDevelopment of an Economic Resource Play �Saskatchewan VikingCentral Alberta DuvernayAlberta Viking – Growth in ActivityInvesting in Future Growth OpportunitiesUpper Montney Light Oil ExposureEnhanced Oil RecoveryMulti-Zoned, Prolific Spirit River ExposureLegacy ProductionTechnologyNew Pool Discovery and DevelopmentSlide Number 43History of PrairieSky’s Fee LandsTypes of RoyaltiesActive Management of Land BaseLeadership TeamDisclaimer & Cautionary StatementsOther DisclosureSlide Number 50