National Post (National Edition)

OIL PRICES PLUNGE AS SAUDI PRODUCTION RECOVERS.

CANADIAN CRUDE Kenney goes global with pitch on heels of Mideast drone strike

- KEVIN ORLAND AND CATHERINE NGAI

CALGARY/NEW YORK • Forget Canadian nice.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, whose province produces more oil than most OPEC nations, has a message for environmen­talists, investors and anyone else who will listen: The world needs more Canadian crude, and standing in the way is foolish.

Kenney’s United Conservati­ve Party swept to power in April. He’s travelling to New York and Ohio this week and planning trips to the U.K., Germany and possibly Asia in the coming months to tout the benefits of Canadian oil, which he says has gotten a bad rap from critics that have unfairly demonized Alberta’s oilsands. Against the backdrop of a drone attack in Saudi Arabia that idled five per cent of global oil production, Canada offers a safe, secure and socially responsibl­e source of energy, Kenney said.

“We’ve seen some institutio­nal investors rate the Alberta oilsands very low on their ESG matrix while they continue to finance the Saudi, Iranian and Russian oil industries,” Kenney said in an interview at Bloomberg headquarte­rs in New York on Monday. “We’ll be challengin­g them to give us a great deal more credit for being the only stable liberal democracy among the largest oil producers in the world.”

Alberta produces almost 3.8 million barrels of oil a day, trailing only Saudi Arabia, the U.S., and Iraq. Environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) criteria are standards socially conscious investors use to screen possible investment­s.

The U.S. visit represents Kenney, 51, following through on a campaign promise to go to bat for Alberta’s oil industry, whose oilsands have become a target of environmen­talists concerned about greenhouse gas emissions. Kenney has also started a $30 million “war room” to combat misinforma­tion about the province’s energy industry.

The flight of capital from Canada’s oil industry has been a key concern in the sector. Over the past three years, foreign companies have divested more than US$30 billion of Canadian energy holdings as a lack of pipeline space weighs on Canadian crude prices. Many have reinvested those proceeds in the U.S., seeking quicker returns in the Permian Basin.

Kenney also touted environmen­tal advancemen­ts made in Alberta that have lowered the emissions intensity of projects, and said exporting Canadian natural gas and having it displace coal in China, could be a top strategy for combating climate change.

Kenney is starting his U.S. swing in New York, where he’ll speak at the Manhattan Institute and meet with global investment and private-equity firms as well as other investors and business leaders. Later in the week,

THE KIND OF STRIKE WE SAW IS UNTHINKABL­E

IN CANADA.

he’s travelling to Ohio to tour a BP Plc and Husky Energy Inc. refinery and meet with energy industry stakeholde­rs.

His visit comes after a drone strike took half of Saudi Arabia’s output off the market, prompting a surge in global oil prices. Kenney touted Alberta’s remote location as benefits in a world with rising geopolitic­al risks. While Canada’s oil industry has faced output hiccups from environmen­tal protesters and wildfires, there are many risks it won’t face, he said.

“The kind of military strike we saw this weekend is obviously unthinkabl­e in Canada,” Kenney said. “And really, I hope American policy-makers and investors are reminded of that.”

Bloomberg

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 ?? DEAN PILLING / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Alberta Premier Jason Kenney heads to the U.S. this week to promote Canadian oil.
DEAN PILLING / POSTMEDIA NEWS Alberta Premier Jason Kenney heads to the U.S. this week to promote Canadian oil.

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