Friday, April 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Put Oil 'Crisis' On First Ministers' Agenda: Alberta, Saskatchewan Premiers

The Canadian Press, 04 Dec, 2018 11:20 AM
  • Put Oil 'Crisis' On First Ministers' Agenda: Alberta, Saskatchewan Premiers
Alberta and Saskatchewan want issues facing the oilpatch to be on the agenda when premiers meet with the prime minister later this week.
 
 
Alberta Premier Rachel Notley and Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe have made the request in an open letter to Justin Trudeau.
 
 
They say the current agenda does not include any discussion of a crisis facing the energy industry.
 
 
Alberta's oil is currently fetching bargain basement prices thanks to a growing glut and lack of pipeline capacity to get oil to market.
 
 
The premiers say the problem is costing Canada $80 million a day and the meeting agenda should reflect that.
 
 
The premiers are scheduled to meet with Trudeau in Montreal on Friday.
 
 
"During your recent visit to Calgary, you called the economic impact of the oil price differential a 'crisis.' We agree," Notley and Moe wrote in a letter released Tuesday.
 
 
"A crisis of this magnitude must be reflected in any discussion on 'Economic Competitiveness.' We trust that the agenda for our upcoming First Ministers’ Meeting can be revised to better reflect the need for a substantive discussion on issues of critical importance to the Canadian economy."
 
 
While the rest of the world sells its oil at about $50 per barrel, Notley has said Alberta fetches only $10.
 
 
She has ordered a mandatory cut to oil production which amounts to 8.7 per cent of output to reduce the glut of oil forcing the steep discounts. The cuts are scheduled to end on Dec. 31, 2019.
 
 
Alberta is also planning on buying as many as 80 locomotives and 7,000 rail tankers — expected to cost hundreds of millions of dollars — to move the province's excess oil to markets and address the pipeline bottleneck.
 
 
The Trans Mountain expansion project, which would triple capacity to the B.C. coast, is now in legal limbo despite being approved two years ago as Ottawa revisits the impacts on First Nations and B.C.'s marine environment.

MORE National ARTICLES

Man Charged With Second-Degree Murder In Death Of Burnaby Woman Nicole Hasselmann On Barnet Highway

A murder charge has been laid against a man following the death of a 34-year-old woman in hospital shortly after the Mounties began investigating a crash on a highway in Burnaby, B.C.

Man Charged With Second-Degree Murder In Death Of Burnaby Woman Nicole Hasselmann On Barnet Highway

Some Holiday Light Displays Can Hike Yuletide Costs, BC Hydro Warns

VANCOUVER — BC Hydro is warning homeowners who string up elaborate holiday lighting displays that those decorations can significantly boost power costs.

Some Holiday Light Displays Can Hike Yuletide Costs, BC Hydro Warns

Vancouver Expects To Collect $38 Million From Vacancy Tax In First Year

Vancouver Expects To Collect $38 Million From Vacancy Tax In First Year
VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver says it has collected $21 million in the first full year of its empty homes tax and another $17 million could still flow into its coffers.

Vancouver Expects To Collect $38 Million From Vacancy Tax In First Year

Raj Grewal Told Liberals He Had More Than $1-Million In Debt

Former liberal MP Raj Grewal's transactions worth millions of dollars and his movements have been under the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's lens for a couple of months.

Raj Grewal Told Liberals He Had More Than $1-Million In Debt

Global Affairs Says Another Canadian Diplomat In Cuba Has Fallen Ill

Global Affairs Says Another Canadian Diplomat In Cuba Has Fallen Ill
That includes diplomats posted to the Canadian embassy in Havana, as well as their dependants, who have come down with a mysterious illness that causes dizziness, headaches and trouble concentrating.

Global Affairs Says Another Canadian Diplomat In Cuba Has Fallen Ill

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Calls Back-To-Work 'The Worst, Most Draconian Legislation'

Bill C-89 was rushed through the House of Commons and the Senate and went into effect on Tuesday.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Calls Back-To-Work 'The Worst, Most Draconian Legislation'