Montreal Gazette

Oilsands a ‘staples trap,’ study warns

Too much of a dependence could hurt economy

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — A new report warns of the perils to the Canadian economy of relying too much on the oilsands.

The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es study says Canada is heading toward a “staples trap,” whereby the more quickly bitumen is exported, the less diversifie­d and productive the economy becomes.

The study’s authors also warn of a looming “carbon trap” in which the Canadian economy is so closely linked to carbon-producing industries that it becomes difficult to adopt measures to deal with climate change.

“What goes up always comes down where commoditie­s are concerned,” co-author Jim Stanford, an economist with the Canadian Auto Workers, said in an interview.

“Our concern is that Canadian policy-makers who were so quick to jump on the bandwagon of us becoming an energy superpower forgot those lessons of the potential downside of a staples-based strategy for our whole economy.”

A big danger facing the oil industry is shrinking markets for fossil fuels as a result of global efforts to address climate change, says the report.

The report was co-written with Tony Clarke, head of the left-leaning Polaris Institute, Diana Gibson, a former research director of the Parkland Institute in Alberta, and Brendan Haley, a PhD candidate at Carleton University in Ottawa.

Countries that rely too heavily on raw materials can fall into a dangerous cycle, they argue.

“Staples-based economies must make enormous fixedcost investment­s in production and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, generally undertaken by large, often foreign-owned, companies,” the report says.

“To pay off these overhead costs and reward investors, staples industries face an enormous motivation to produce and export their staple faster.”

Doing so can drive down the price.

Investing so much into one industry can also cause others to wither, say the authors, who point to manufactur­ing as one industry that has suffered from a high Canadian dollar linked to soaring oil prices.

“The brunt of resourcedr­iven sectoral restructur­ing in Canada’s economy has clearly been borne by the manufactur­ing sector,” the report says.

The report recommends tighter regulation­s and control of the oilsands to slow developmen­t, and transition­ing to a low-carbon economy in which government­s play a greater role than they now do.

 ?? BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Some economists argue resource depletion and environmen­tal damage involved in sustaining a perpetuall­y burgeoning GNP isn’t being accounted for in the oilsands.
BLOOMBERG NEWS Some economists argue resource depletion and environmen­tal damage involved in sustaining a perpetuall­y burgeoning GNP isn’t being accounted for in the oilsands.

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