Oil sands bitumen exports undermine Canada's economic future
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')anada is headed down a path of economic ruin by exporting raw oil sands bitumen, former ICBC CEO Robyn Allan said in her stirring presentation a week ago at the Sheraton Wall Centre. Allan highlighted the economic danger posed by oil sands pipelines including Keystone XL, Northern Gateway and Kinder Morgan that the federal government has been promoting in the name of jobs and growth. Below are excerpts from her presentation, "Oil Sands Development and the Economic Consequences".
Let me begin by being clear about the oil sector in Canada and who is running the show.
Canada’s energy strategy is determined in the boardrooms of a handful of multinational corporations and by the governments of foreign countries through their state-owned oil companies.
The strategy is communicated to the federal and provincial governments through closed-door meetings with lobbyists and at state dinners over dessert in foreign countries.
It is supported by legislative changes that reduce environmental protection and public participation.
Five multinational oil companies control 78% of current oil sands production. These companies are Suncor, Imperial Oil (whose parent is Exxon Mobile), Shell, Canadian Natural Resources and Cenovus. And new, primarily state owned companies, such as Norway’s Statoil, and China’s Sinopec, Petro China and the Chinese National Offshore Oil Company (CNOOC), that recently purchased Nexen.
So what is big oil’s plan for us?
They want to rapidly extract oil sands heavy crude called bitumen, mix it with imported diluent to allow it to flow through pipelines and export it as diluted bitumen to the US Gulf Coast along Keystone XL and to Asia along Northern Gateway and TransMountain’s twin.
Economic exploitation
We cannot allow a handful of powerful multinational oil companies and foreign countries through their state-owned oil companies to dictate an energy strategy that:
hollows out our resource sector;
robs Canadians of meaningful jobs and environmental standards;
crowds out BC’s legitimate economic activity;
increases petroleum product prices for Canadian consumers and businesses; and
puts our terrestrial and marine based ecologies directly in harms way.
To put it simply: when it comes to non-renewable resources, rapid extraction and export of raw bitumen is not economic development.
Development means enhancement, value added, improvement—some form of contributing to a better state because of economic activity.
Creating a dependency on condensate imports
Big oil’s decisions to enhance refineries in the US to accept our bitumen, and plan to do the same in Asia, has already started to hollow out Alberta’s resource sector. The percentage of bitumen upgraded in the province has begun to decline.
By 2017, Alberta will only upgrade 48% of the bitumen it produces and by 2025 it will be less than 40%. That’s a long way away from where we would have been when Alberta promised 72% of the bitumen would be upgraded in Alberta by 2016.
Because bitumen is so dense, like tar or wet cement, in order for it to flow down a pipeline it requires diluent, like condensate.
Up until 2005 Canada was self-sufficient in condensate production. When we produced a barrel of bitumen and mixed it with domestically produced condensate to make diluted bitumen, we exported a barrel of diluted bitumen—or what the industry refers to as dilbit.
Not true any more.
The “The Top 10” economic reasons to reject oil pipelines and supertankers along BC’s coast are:
1. Decades of higher oil prices for Canadian consumers and businesses across the country.
2. Lost opportunity to add value, create meaningful jobs and control environmental standards here at home.
3. Hollowing out of the oil sector as raw bitumen exports take precedence over upgrading and refining.
4. Continued reliance on foreign oil imports through eastern Canada.
5. A growing dependence on foreign condensate imports through western Canada.
6. Crowding-out of BC’s legitimate and vibrant economic activity.
7. Twice the number of pipelines and double the tanker traffic to move diluted bitumen as compared to upgraded bitumen.
8. More than twice the environmental risk and related costs.
9. As soon as Northern Gateway and TransMountain are approved, more pipeline capacity will be demanded.
10. Supernatural British Columbia becomes a Supertanker terminal for Alberta.


