Edmonton Journal

Oil and gas sector needs help, industry official says

- GORDON KENT

Canada must streamline its rules and regulation­s for the oil and gas sector or risk falling behind the rest of the world, the head of an industry associatio­n says.

Firms have sold holdings in Alberta’s oilsands and invested in such countries as Brazil and Iran because they expect better returns, while the United States is relaxing laws and cutting taxes to boost the energy field, said Tim McMillan, president of the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers.

While the industry’s global spending is expected to rise by five per cent to nine per cent this year, it’s likely to decrease about one per cent in Canada to $43 billion, down from $81 billion in 2014 before oil prices dropped, McMillan told an Edmonton Chamber of Commerce meeting Wednesday.

“In Canada today we have between 40 and 50 regulatory, legislativ­e and policy issues that we’re working on, and a substantia­l number of important issues that will have an effect on our competitiv­eness and how we do our business,” he said.

“The reputation that too often precedes us is Canada is a place that can’t get things done. We need to take that on fully, we need to own it, and if we can’t we’re going to be looking at lower investment numbers, lower jobs, into the future.”

Over the past 18 months, major projects such as the Northern Gateway and Energy East pipelines and the Pacific Northwest liquefied natural gas facility have been cancelled, McMillan said.

While Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain pipeline expansion has been approved by the National Energy Board, it continues to run into opposition from the British Columbia government, he said.

He later told reporters the Alberta government, which has stopped importing B.C. wine, needed to react after the province proposed a ban on increased bitumen shipments that would effectivel­y stop the Trans Mountain expansion.

 ??  ?? Tim McMillan
Tim McMillan

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