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Canada’s energy conversation shouldn’t ‘start and end’ with pipelines, Carney says

Canada’s energy conversation shouldn’t ‘start and end’ with pipelines, Carney says
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Prime Minister Mark Carney says he agrees “more needs to be done” to support Canada’s energy sector and strengthen the wider domestic economy, but reiterated he believes the industry should not revolve solely around the conventional oil and gas pipelines that have long fuelled political debate out West.

In an interview Tuesday, Carney said his new government will be focused on diversifying the energy sector beyond its roots in Alberta’s oilpatch to include other, clean energy resources from across the country. He did not rule out pipelines as part of the discussion, but said he doesn’t believe most Canadians see those projects as the be-all-end-all option.

“It’s remarkable. In some circles, this conversation starts and ends with pipelines,” Carney told CBC’s Power & Politics host David Cochrane in Ottawa.

“But that’s what it has become politically,” Cochrane noted.

“No, that is not what it’s become politically. That is not what it’s become for Canada. Canada as a nation,” Carney said.

“Canadians, yes, they want energy pipelines that make sense. They also want connections between our clean grids. They want actually less carbon, so they want carbon capture and storage … they want broader [mineral exporting] corridors, for example … that open up whole swaths of the country to new trade so that we are sovereign in the most important components of the future,” he continued.

“All of those things are possible.”

WATCH | Carney on his vision for Canada’s energy sector: 

Carney says ‘more will be done’ on energy, but conversation isn’t all about pipelines

17 hours ago

Duration 3:52

Asked by CBC’s Power & Politics host David Cochrane about the separatist sentiment in Alberta, Prime Minister Mark Carney says his government is ‘committed’ to working with Canadians across the country.

Stalled or cancelled pipeline projects have fuelled feelings of alienation in the West for years. Oilpatch leaders chastised the previous Liberal government for introducing policies they said hurt the sector — like clean fuel regulations, the proposed emissions cap and changes to the federal assessment of major projects.

Concern has risen further since the Liberal Party held onto power in last month’s election, despite only winning three of the 51 seats in the deep-blue provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan. Support for a referendum on Alberta’s sovereignty has seen renewed support, in turn, with backers insisting the province has its own unique identity with values Ottawa doesn’t share.

Asked on Tuesday how he planned to confront the discontent, Carney said he believes it was co-operation between Alberta and Ottawa that gave rise to the first large-scale commercial oilsands project he remembers from his childhood. (The prime minister was born in Fort Smith, N.W.T., two years before the Great Canadian Oil Sands plant opened in Fort McMurray, Alta., in 1967.)

“When I was born, the oilsands was a concept,” said Carney, who grew up in Edmonton. “It was the ingenuity of Canadians, many Albertan engineers and entrepreneurs, and the partnership between the federal government and the provincial government that made the oilsands what they are. This is what we need today.”

WATCH | Albertans have ‘legitimate grievances,’ Poilievre says: 

Poilievre says ‘we need to unite this country,’ but Albertans ‘have a right to be frustrated’

15 days ago

Duration 1:24

When asked if he would denounce the Alberta separatist movement, Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre said Albertans have ‘legitimate grievances’ about industry but he is ‘against separation.’

Carney said multiple provinces and Indigenous leaders will also play a role.

“The only way to get [that co-operation], in my view, is to recognize what a moment that we are in, the need for ambition and the need to work together.”

Tim Powers, a political columnist who has worked on numerous Conservative campaigns, said Carney could have been more direct in his answer but it was clear he’s not outright against pipelines as a concept.

“He’s been a bit evasive, but he hasn’t put a million caveats on it all. And in other places he’s said he’s not opposed to a pipeline. So we should expect, as he is calibrating and looking at options, a pipeline of some variety — or two — could be in the mix,” Powers said.

Canada’s oil and gas sector has not pitched new pipelines under the current regulatory environment. After the election last month, dozens of Canadian oil and gas CEOs wrote to Carney and asked that he repeal the assessment law and scrap emissions cap regulations.

Watch David Cochrane’s full interview with Prime Minister Mark Carney: 

Carney talks U.S. relations, his government’s ambitions in exclusive interview | Power & Politics

16 hours ago

Duration 21:01

Prime Minister Mark Carney sat down for a wide-ranging one-on-one interview with CBC’s Power & Politics host David Cochrane on Tuesday. Carney addressed Canada’s current relationship with the U.S. along with the challenges ahead for his new government, including housing affordability and separatist sentiment in Alberta.

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