Lethbridge Herald

How Albertans can invest in their future — again

THEY MUST FIRST PURGE THEMSELVES OF THE IDEA THAT THE MARKET IS THE BEST INSTRUMENT TO DETERMINE THEIR FUTURE

- Robert McGarvey TROY MEDIA — EDMONTON

There’s a lot of talk these days about diversifyi­ng Alberta’s economy. (I’m pretty sure we wouldn’t be having this conversati­on if oil was at $100 per barrel but that’s not the case.)

It’s time for Albertans to develop the full potential of our greatest natural resource: people. But before we begin to change direction we must purge ourselves of some wrong-headed thinking.

Perhaps the most egregious fallacy that Albertans carry today is the idea that the market is the best instrument to determine our future; that getting out of the way is the best thing government­s can do to support the economy.

What has this attitude meant for Albertans?

Over the past four decades, the oil and gas industry has grossed roughly $3.5 trillion of value (and tens of trillions of market capitaliza­tion), developing Alberta’s publicly-owned energy resources. Regrettabl­y, the Age of Oil is ending — leaving Albertans broke, with limited options going forward.

It’s time to wake up and write a new future. We could do worse than learn from our past.

In the early 1960s, the Alberta government (under Social Credit Premier Ernest Manning) defied convention­al market realities when it launched the Great Canadian Oil Sands (GCOS) project.

Forecaster­s could see convention­al oil and gas wouldn’t last forever in our province, so the government got innovative. Far from leaving our future to the market, it worked with experts in the oil industry to define a workable business solution that would unlock the potential of the oilsands. The result was a publicly-sponsored, private-sector company called Great Canadian Oil Sands.

It was clear that global capital markets (investment banks and other institutio­nal investors) wouldn’t finance an unproven heavy oil venture, so GCOS went directly to the people of Alberta.

Albertans were invited to invest in their own future. More than 100,000 Albertans (representi­ng roughly 27 per cent of households at the time) purchased $1,500 debentures ($12,000 in 2017 dollars), taking an equity position in Alberta’s future. That was a lot of money in 1962 — consider that the average house price in Alberta at that time was only $12,500.

Following this successful primary financing, a Canadian subsidiary of U.S.based Sun Oil Co. entered the picture, investing an additional $250 million to get the project up and running near Fort McMurray.

It was the largest single private investment to that point in Canada’s history. GCOS constructe­d and operated the first commercial oilsands plant, with production beginning in 1967. Today, Suncor, the successor to GCOS, produces more than half a million barrels of oil a day, almost 23 per cent of Alberta’s total oilsands production.

It was an early example of average Albertans investing in their future and defying convention­al logic in order to change a market reality.

And it’s not the only example of Albertans investing in their own future.

The Alberta Energy Co. (AEC) is a classic example. AEC was incorporat­ed in September 1973. Like GCOS, AEC was a government-sponsored private-sector initiative designed to accomplish economic and political goals.

AEC’s mandate encompasse­d a variety of roles in the convention­al energy industry — and much more. Premier Peter Lougheed felt Albertans should be doing as much of the secondary upgrading and refining of our crude oil as possible, something the market discourage­d.

AEC was financed in much the same fashion as GCOS. The province invested $75 million (half the initial capital) and then sold another $75 million in shares to 60,000 Albertans. AEC eventually merged with PanCanadia­n Energy. The combined companies became EnCana, now a significan­t player in the industry.

The challenges are different today. It’s not energy developmen­t that’s needed, but a diversific­ation of the economy to unleash the technology potential of Alberta and Albertans, and create a more prosperous future.

It’s a big challenge, but as former General Electric CEO Jack Welch used to say, “Control your own destiny or someone else will.”

As Manning and Lougheed discovered, if government gets its role right, Albertans will invest directly and heavily in their future.

Robert McGarvey is chief strategist for Troy Media Digital Solutions Ltd., an economic historian and former managing director of Merlin Consulting, a London, U.K.-based consulting firm. Robert’s most recent book is Futuromics: A Guide to Thriving in Capitalism’s Third Wave. Distribute­d by Troy Media

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