Edmonton Journal

Smith preaches fiscal restraint, savings fund

Global oil and gas prices a cause for concern: premier

- BILL GRAVELAND

Premier Danielle Smith says spending needs to remain in check as her government looks to sock away savings into its rainyday fund.

She says the government's longterm revenues increase about three per cent a year. Meanwhile, her government aims to have at least $250 billion in its Heritage Savings Trust Fund — up from the $25 billion it's forecastin­g this year — by 2050.

“We can't spend every single dollar today on today's needs and wants. We have to start putting money aside so that we're preparing for what the world might look like in 20 or 30 years,” Smith said told reporters at a schools announceme­nt in Calgary on Friday.

“I'm just asking everyone, including members of our public service, to accept we're all in this together, that we want to make sure we have an environmen­t where I can start reducing personal income taxes.”

In the 2024-25 budget introduced Thursday, spending was forecast at $73.2 billion, a 3.9 per cent increase from last year. The government expects a surplus of $367 million.

Resource revenues are expected to make up nearly a quarter of provincial revenues through 2026. Each dollar-drop in the benchmark price of oil costs Alberta more than $600 million.

The government has forecast the price of West Texas Intermedia­te crude to average US$74 per barrel.

“I am very concerned about what's happening with oil and gas prices internatio­nally,” Smith said.

The government is to put $2 billion into its heritage fund out of cash left over from this year but anticipate­s no payments for the next three years.

Smith said she hopes the fund will grow to a point it can provide a replacemen­t for resource revenues.

“My finance minister's nervous, because we don't know what oil and gas prices are going to look like over the coming years. He and I are highly motivated to find that new revenue source, that investment in the Heritage Savings Trust Fund.”

The government is also reserving $2 billion for contingenc­ies such as drought and wildfire, but that is about a third less than what was spent last year.

The contingenc­y fund is fine the way it is, Smith said.

“We know there are going to be extraordin­ary years. Then we've had full years we haven't had to engage emergency response when it comes to fires,” Smith said.

“We won't always have a $2.9-billion disaster like we did last year.

A certain amount of base funding for the typical season is prudent but also making sure we have a substantia­l consistenc­y — so we're never caught out is a wise way of going about it.”

Wildfires burned a record 22,000 square kilometres in the province during last year's season.

Heather Sweet, the Opposition NDP critic for agricultur­e, forestry and rural economic developmen­t, said the United Conservati­ve Party government isn't putting enough money toward wildfire readiness.

“The UCP is planning for the upcoming wildfire season on a hope and a prayer, while drasticall­y underfundi­ng preparatio­n for wildfires this year,” she said in a release.

“Hope is not a strategy.”

 ?? GAVIN YOUNG ?? Premier Danielle Smith says she wants the province's Heritage Savings Trust Fund built up to $250 billion by 2050.
GAVIN YOUNG Premier Danielle Smith says she wants the province's Heritage Savings Trust Fund built up to $250 billion by 2050.

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