Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

A Stronger Alberta: Amarjeet Sohi Announces $1.6B For Canada's Oil And Gas Sector

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2018 07:57 PM

    Ottawa is spending $1.6 billion to help struggling energy companies stay afloat, buy new equipment and diversify as Alberta grapples with bargain basement oil prices.


    Natural Resources Minister Amarjeet Sohi says $1 billion is to be set aside through Export Development Canada for oil and gas companies to make capital investments and purchase new technology.


    Another $500 million is to be made available through the Business Development Bank of Canada over the next two years to help smaller oil and gas companies navigate the downturn.


    Sohi says a further $150 million is to be used for clean growth and infrastructure projects.


    The package does not include money for more rail cars that Alberta is planning to purchase to help move a glut of oil behind the low price of Canadian oil.


    Sohi says the money, largely in the form of commercial loans, is available immediately.


    "We understand that when Alberta hurts, so does Canada," Sohi said Tuesday. "Together we can build a stronger Alberta (and) a more prosperous Canada."


    The price of Alberta oil plummeted so low last month that Alberta Premier Rachel Notley said Canada was practically giving it away. While the world sells its oil at about $50 a barrel, Alberta's oil at one point fetched only $11 a barrel.


    Notley plans to buy as many as 80 locomotives and 7,000 rail tankers — expected to cost hundreds of millions of dollars — and has announced an oil production cut to begin next year. That has helped push the price back up.


    She has said Canada's economy is still losing as much as $80 million a day because of the discount.


    "We understand that for the long-term success and growth of the oil sector, nothing is more important than building the pipeline capacity to expand our non-U.S. global markets," Sohi said.


    The Trans Mountain expansion project, which would triple the flow of oil to the British Columbia coast, is in limbo despite being approved two years ago. Ottawa is revisiting the potential impacts on First Nations and B.C.'s marine environment.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Recommendations Approved On How To Hand Out Broncos GoFundMe Cash

    SASKATOON — A Saskatchewan judge has approved a committee's recommendation on how to distribute $15.2 million raised in a GoFundMe campaign after the Humboldt Broncos bus crash.

    Recommendations Approved On How To Hand Out Broncos GoFundMe Cash

    RCMP Officer Was Not Overly Stressed By Dziekanski Case: Former Supervisor

    John Ward, a retired staff sergeant, told a coroner's inquest today that part of the job of a communications officer is to trust that the information going out to the media is largely correct.

    RCMP Officer Was Not Overly Stressed By Dziekanski Case: Former Supervisor

    B.C.'s Insurance Corporation Cuts Ad Budget In Favour Of Traffic Enforcement

    B.C.'s Insurance Corporation Cuts Ad Budget In Favour Of Traffic Enforcement
    VICTORIA — The Insurance Corporation of British Columbia is slashing its advertising budget in half and redirecting the funds toward police traffic enforcement.

    B.C.'s Insurance Corporation Cuts Ad Budget In Favour Of Traffic Enforcement

    One In Critical, Non-Life-Threatening Condition After School Bus Crash In B.C.

    CACHE CREEK, B.C. — A school bus carrying a high school girls' volleyball team has crashed on a highway in British Columbia's Interior, injuring several people including one with critical, but non-life-threatening injuries.

    One In Critical, Non-Life-Threatening Condition After School Bus Crash In B.C.

    Motive For The Raj Sangha's Shooting Death Is Unclear: Police

    SURREY, B.C. — Police say a man is dead after a targeted shooting that appears to have no links to an ongoing gang dispute in Surrey, B.C.

    Motive For The Raj Sangha's Shooting Death Is Unclear: Police

    Latest Rain Storm Swells B.C.'s South Coast Rivers, Dumps Heavy Rain

    Rainfall warnings remain posted for the east coast of Vancouver and the inner south coast all the way east to the Fraser Canyon, but wind warnings were dropped Monday night.

    Latest Rain Storm Swells B.C.'s South Coast Rivers, Dumps Heavy Rain