Page added on March 10, 2008
Both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are threatening to opt out of NAFTA if elected, which means re-negotiate, a position that is quite tenable particularly with a protectionist Congress. This really is about more than politics
…NAFTA’s energy section broadly unfetters energy trade between the U.S. and Canada. But it adds a virtual guarantee of U.S. supply. (Mexico got a “pass” on energy.) Neither country may reduce the proportion of its energy exports to the other relative to the “total supply” of the exporting country during the prior 36-month period. The rub is that “total supply” includes shipments to its domestic and foreign users.
But if you look at the current energy landscape, China wants to buy Canadian energy. Canada imports more than 55 per cent of its oil needs. Canada continues to be the largest oil and gas supplier to the U.S. Let’s assume Canada continues to consume the same quantities of its own energy production and importation. If so, could Canada sell energy to China, or any country other than the U.S.? No. The proportionality maintenance obligation prevents that.
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