The
desperation is palpable.
Despite
all the "amazing new technologies," Canada's junk oil is so
costly to develop that even this rich country can't afford it. Just
like every other country, Canada is starting to sink and its leaders
are grasping at straws.
"Countries
in the Asia-Pacific region are hungry for energy and minerals and
metals and forest products they need to fuel growth and build a
better quality of life for their citizens," says the natural
resources minister in the full knowledge that there aren't enough
resources on the planet for everyone to live developed-nation
lifestyles.
--
Rice Farmer
Canada
says it needs foreign capital to develop its oil
Canada
does not have enough money to develop its oil resources and move oil
to market, and therefore welcomes foreign capital, Natural Resources
Minister Joe Oliver said on Tuesday.
5
September, 2012
Oliver
was answering a reporter's question about a $15.1 billion bid by
China's CNOOC Ltd to buy Canadian oil producer Nexen Inc, and the
possibility of state-owned Kuwait Petroleum Corp doing a joint
venture in Canada's oil sands with Athabasca Oil Corp.
"I
don't want to talk about that specific proposal because it will also
be reviewed by the ministry, however we know that we have a need for
an immense amount of capital to build the infrastructure necessary to
develop the resources and move the resources to the market," he
said. "We don't have enough capital in this country and so we
are welcoming capital from the outside."
Resource
investment in Canada could be worth some C$650 billion ($658.9
billion) over the next 10 years, representing over 600 projects that
are planned or underway, Oliver said in a speech at an investment
bank in Toronto's financial district.
"Those
numbers are just the beginning," he added. "Countries in
the Asia-Pacific region are hungry for energy and minerals and metals
and forest products they need to fuel growth and build a better
quality of life for their citizens."
Financial
markets are closely monitoring remarks by ministers as the Canadian
government decides whether to allow the CNOOC takeover bid to go
through. There is at least some opposition to the idea within
cabinet.
Canada
has the third largest oil reserves in the world and the government is
eager to tap new markets, including those in China, for its crude
products. Essentially all oil currently exported by Canada goes to
the United States.
In
answer to another question, Oliver said reciprocity would be one of a
number of things that government will look at in determining whether
the CNOOC deal would be of net benefit to Canada.
Prime
Minister Stephen Harper and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, when asked
about the bid for Nexen, also have alluded to reciprocity, the idea
that Beijing must also be open to Canadian investment in China.
RESOURCE
DRIVEN
Natural
resources are a big business in Canada, with the forestry, oil and
gas, and mining sectors directly accountable for 15 percent of the
country's gross domestic product in 2011.
Add
in indirect investments - like construction and financial services -
and that number rises to nearly 20 percent of the country's income,
Oliver said.
Canada's
ruling Conservatives are eager to promote the economic benefits of
resource development in an effort to bolster support for their
policies, which some consider to be too business-friendly at the risk
of the environment.
The
right-of-center party has been criticized for a recent move to ease
the environmental assessment process for major projects, including
mining and oil developments. But proposed pipelines to transport
crude oil have been particularly contentious.
TransCanada
Corp was forced to split its Keystone XL project in half after U.S.
President Barack Obama refused to allow the original proposal to go
ahead because of environmental concerns.
Meanwhile,
Enbridge Inc's Northern Gateway project, which would transport crude
from landlocked Alberta to a port in British Columbia for shipment to
Asia, has faced strong opposition by environmental and aboriginal
groups worried about the risk of an oil spill.
Oliver
said the government continues to invest in pipeline and tanker safety
and is improving regulatory oversight of the industry.
"We
believe that the record of safety, which is a strong one, will be
made even stronger in the future with technological improvements and
with regulatory requirements," he said.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.