GREEN: Carney government’s anti-oil sentiment no longer in doubt

GREEN: Carney government’s anti-oil sentiment no longer in doubt


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The Carney government, which on Monday survived a confidence vote in Parliament by the skin of its teeth, recently released a “second tranche of nation-building projects” blessed by the Major Projects Office. To have a chance to survive Canada’s otherwise oppressive regulatory gauntlet, projects must get on this Caesar-like-thumbs-up-thumbs-down list.

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The first tranche of major projects released in September included no new oil pipelines but pertained largely to natural gas, nuclear power, mineral production, etc. The absence of proposed oil pipelines was not surprising, as Ottawa’s regulatory barricade on oil production means no sane private company would propose such a project. (The first tranche carries a price tag of $60 billion in government/private-sector spending.)

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Another miss for oilpatch

Now, the second tranche of projects also includes not a whiff of support for oil production, transport and export to non-U.S. markets. Again, not surprising as the prime minister has done nothing to lift the existing regulatory blockade on oil transport out of Alberta.

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So, what’s on the latest list?

LNG port for Fraser
The LNG tanker GasLog Glasgow arrives at LNG Canada’s shipping terminal in Kitimat, B.C., on June 28, 2025, to begin loading the first export cargo of super-cooled liquefied natural gas for delivery to Asia. Postmedia Calgary archive

There’s a “conservation corridor” for B.C. and Yukon; more LNG projects (both in B.C.); more mineral projects (nickel, graphite, tungsten — all electric vehicle battery constituents); and still more transmission for “clean energy” — again, mostly in B.C. And Nunavut comes out ahead with a new hydro project to power Iqaluit. (The second tranche carries a price tag of $58 billion in government/private-sector spending.)

No doubt many of these projects are worthy endeavours that shouldn’t require the imprimatur of the “Major Projects Office” to see the light of day, and merit development in the old-fashioned Canadian process where private-sector firms propose a project to Canada’s environmental regulators, get necessary and sufficient safety approval, and then build things.

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However, new pipeline projects from Alberta would also easily stand on their own feet in that older regulatory regime based on necessary and sufficient safety approval, without the Carney government additionally deciding what is — or is not — important to the government, as opposed to the market, and without provincial governments and First Nations erecting endless barriers.

Crystal clear intentions

Regardless of how you value the various projects on the first two tranches, the second tranche makes it crystal clear (if it wasn’t already) that the Carney government will follow (or double down) on the Trudeau government’s plan to constrain oil production in Canada, particularly products derived from Alberta’s oilsands. There’s nary a mention that these products even exist in the government’s latest announcement, despite the fact the oilsands are the world’s fourth-largest proven reserve of oil. This comes on the heels of the Carney government’s first proposed budget, which also reified the government’s fixation to extinguish greenhouse gas emissions in Canada, continue on the path to “net-zero 2050” and retain Canada’s all-EV new car future beginning in 2036.

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It’s clear, at this point, the Carney government is committed to the policies of the previous Liberal government, has little interest in harnessing the economic value of Canada’s oil holdings nor the potential global influence Canada might exert by exporting its oil products to Asia, Europe and other points abroad. This policy fixation will come at a significant cost to future generations of Canadians.

Kenneth Green is a senior fellow at the Fraser Institute.

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Amelia Frost

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