The Daily Courier

Ottawa to boost sliding oil sector

Energy industry to get $1.6B to stem political, economic pain

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OTTAWA — Canada’s battered energy industry will get a $1.6-billion boost from Ottawa today to try to slow the political and economic bleeding.

Natural Resources Minister Amarjeet Sohi and Internatio­nal Trade Diversific­ation Minister Jim Carr will be at an Edmonton college campus to unveil a support package for oil and gas companies, which are reeling from record-low oil prices.

The funds will be divided among several different programs, including money to help companies invest in clean growth, loans, and other financial supports to help companies find new markets away from the United States, as well as investment­s in training and new technology.

It is a package based, in some ways, on those offered to softwood, steel and aluminum producers after the United States dealt them direct blows with new import tariffs.

Canada’s oil patch isn’t facing that kind of pressure, but it is still the U.S. behind much of its pain.

With pipelines at capacity and some major refineries down for maintenanc­e this fall, the price for Alberta crude plummeted in the fall, hitting a panic-inducing $11 a barrel in late November.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley’s plan to buy more rail cars to help ship additional oil, as well as her decision to force a production cut from the biggest oil producers starting in January, helped push the price back up, trading above $26 a barrel at the end of last week.

But that is still significan­tly less than the U.S. price and Canada’s economy is losing as much as $80 million a day because of the discount.

Canada’s almost total reliance on the U.S. as an export market contribute­s to the problem. Almost every drop of oil that is not refined and used in Canada is exported to the United States. Without more pipelines to the coasts where oil tankers could theoretica­lly then ship oil overseas, Canada’s oil producers are at the mercy of the Americans.

The only current proposal to increase pipeline capacity to the coasts is the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, which is in limbo following a court ruling overturnin­g its federal approval. Ottawa is trying to get that project back on track with more consultati­ons, but if that does happen, it will be years before oil actually starts to flow.

The impasse has left a sharp divide between Alberta and Ottawa. Although Tuesday’s announceme­nt comes in the Alberta capital, neither Notley nor anyone from the Alberta government is scheduled to be there for the announceme­nt.

Premier Notley has made no secret in recent weeks of her desire to have Ottawa help the province buy new rail cars to ship two additional trains full of Alberta crude out of the province every day.

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