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It’s time for Alberta to play hardball, oilpatch execs say before Trudeau meeting today

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau makes his way to caucus meeting on Parliament Hill Wednesday February 3, 2016 in Ottawa.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is in Alberta now to consider stock of the devastation wrought by the collapse in oil prices.

Trudeau’s rebranding of Canada offers sunshine to Davos, but it is cold comfort for battered oilpatch

Like it or otherwise, he will also get an earful within the spate of anti-energy moves produced by his government that will make a recovery harder.

Indeed, despite declaring in Calgary within the final days of his election campaign last October that “Alberta matters deeply to me,” his policy choices so far show the alternative.

They include: Formalizing a moratorium on oil tanker traffic around the northern B.C. coast that handcuffs the already-permitted Northern Gateway pipeline; additional regulatory requirements for that proposed TransMountain pipeline expansion and the Energy East pipeline conversion that lengthen and duplicate already-unwieldy regulatory processes; reforms towards the National Energy Board that shake confidence in Canada’s ability to get anything built; along with a climate change test on export pipelines that gives Ottawa new powers over Alberta’s energy resources.

We know Canada’s economic engine is limping, and the fact that he is here is a clear indication he understands the federal government cannot be in the sidelines.

Trudeau pushed through the changes to achieve ‘social licence’ for pipelines after no progress was made underneath the Conservatives. The end result to date is that they have empowered opposition and fuelled anger and division, making solutions even more complicated to attain.

Still, there’s appreciation for the visit, which at the minimum shows good intentions so at the start of his mandate.

“It’s clear to me, according to everything in the public domain, the Prime Minister appreciates the degree of the problem,” said Asim Ghosh, president and CEO of integrated oil company Husky Energy Inc. “We know Canada’s economic engine is limping, cheap he’s here is a clear indication he understands the us government cannot be within the sidelines.”

Trudeau could help by providing timely review of pipelines, suggested Ghosh, whose clients are a sizable heavy oil and oilsands producer in Western Canada, and through being mindful of Canada’s competitiveness when boosting environmental requirements.

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