Toronto Star

Trudeau pitches foreign investment while feds in the dark on energy

- ANDY BLATCHFORD THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s sales pitch Friday to attract more foreign investment to Canada comes as the government struggles to get a handle on exactly what foreigners own in the country’s crucial oil and gas sector.

Documents obtained by The Canadian Press show the Finance Department only had a “rough estimate” last year of foreign ownership in the energy sector, a key destinatio­n for investment from abroad.

The February 2015 briefing note, addressed to deputy finance minister Paul Rochon, estimated 40 to 50 per cent of the sector is owned by foreign investors.

“A significan­t amount of foreign capital was brought into Canada to expand oil and gas production,” said the document, obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

“Unfortunat­ely, there are no precise data on the foreign-owned share of the oil and gas sector.”

Statistics Canada says foreign holdings in the country have increased in general in recent years, including a gain of 5.8 per cent from 2013 to 2014. Total foreign holdings hit $361billion last year, which the agency said accounts for almost half of all direct investment in Canada.

When asked about the lack of precise informatio­n for the oilpatch, a spokesman for the Finance Department referred to data collected by Statistics Canada under the Corporatio­ns Returns Act. The latest available data is for 2012, showing foreign control of more than 36.7 per cent of the oil and gas sector.

Foreign investment has at times been a contentiou­s issue in Canada and the former Conservati­ve government wrestled for years to find a policy mix that would make everyone happy.

The Tories, however, ended up sending mixed signals by blocking the takeover of Potash Corp. and changing the rules for state-owned enterprise­s after allowing a Chineseown­ed company to buy Nexen Energy.

On Friday, Trudeau used the global stage at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, to try to reel in more foreign money to help Canada’s limping economy, which has suffered from falling commodity and oil prices.

“Our government understand­s that global trade and foreign investment are key drivers of economic growth and important sources of new jobs,” Trudeau said Friday. “This will be a key priority for us.”

Craig Alexander of the C.D. Howe Institute think-tank said attracting foreign investment is critical for a smaller economy like Canada, where an adequate amount of capital can’t be generated within its borders.

Business investment, Alexander added, is expected to slide in the coming year due to low commodity prices.

That’s why he believes it’s “highly appropriat­e” that a prime minister try to draw the attention of internatio­nal audiences to opportunit­ies in Canada.

Alexander said because of the low commodity prices it’s also important for Canada to attract investment to non-resource sectors, which are expected to help lead the economic turnaround.

He said the weak Canadian dollar, pulled down alongside slumping oil prices, should help lure foreign investors, especially those from the United States.

However, it could still prove tricky in a tough global economy.

“On the one hand, the currency is going to make it a lot more attractive. But the economic backdrop is not one that you would expect to see booming foreign direct investment take place,” said Alexander, C.D. Howe’s vice-president of economic analysis.

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