Alberta
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Alberta
Albertaās oil bankrolls Canadaās public services

This articleĀ supplied byĀ Troy Media.
By Perry Kinkaide and Bill Jones
Itās time Canadians admitted Albertaās oilpatch pays the bills. Other provinces just cash the cheques
When Canadians grumble about Albertaās energy ambitionsālabelling the province greedy for wanting to pump more oilāfew stop to ask how much
money from each barrel ends up owing to them?
The irony is staggering. The very provinces rallying for green purity are cashing cheques underwritten not just by Alberta, but indirectly by the United States, which purchases more than 95 per cent of Albertaās oil and gas, paid in U.S. dollars.
That revenue doesnāt stop at the Rockies. It flows straight to Ottawa, funding equalization programs (which redistribute federal tax revenue to help less wealthy provinces), national infrastructure and federal services that benefit the rest of the country.
This isnāt political rhetoric. Itās economic fact. Before the Leduc oil discovery in 1947, Alberta received about $3 to $5 billion (in todayās dollars) in federal support. Since then, it has paid back more than $500 billion. A $5-billion investment that returned 100 times more is the kind of deal that would send Bay Street into a frenzy.
Albertaās oilpatch includes a massive industry of energy companies, refineries and pipeline networks that produce and export oil and gas, mostly to the U.S. Each barrel of oil generates roughly $14 in federal revenue through corporate taxes, personal income taxes, GST and additional fiscal capacity that boosts equalization transfers. Multiply that by more than 3.7 million barrels of oil (plus 8.6 billion cubic feet of natural gas) exported daily, and itās clear Alberta underwrites much of the countryās prosperity.
Yet many Canadians seem unwilling to acknowledge where their prosperity comes from. Thereās a growing disconnect between how goods are consumed and how theyāre produced. People forget that gasoline comes from oil wells, electricity from power plants and phones from mining. Urban slogans like āBan Fossil Fuelsā rarely engage with the infrastructure and fiscal reality that keeps the country running.
Take Prince Edward Island, for example. From 1957 to 2023, it received $19.8 billion in equalization payments and contributed just $2 billion in taxesāa net gain of $17.8 billion.
Quebec tells a similar story. In 2023 alone, it received more than $14 billion in equalization payments, while continuing to run balanced or surplus budgets. From 1961 to 2023, Quebec received more than $200 billion in equalization payments, much of it funded by revenue from Albertaās oil industry..
To be clear, not all federal transfers are equalization. Provinces also receive funding through national programs such as the Canada Health Transfer and
Canada Social Transfer. But equalization is the one most directly tied to the relative strength of provincial economies, and Albertaās wealth has long driven that system.
By contrast to the have-not provinces, Albertaās contribution has been extraordinaryāan estimated 11.6 per cent annualized return on the federal
support it once received. Each Canadian receives about $485 per year fromĀ Alberta-generated oil revenues alone. Alberta is not the problemāitās the
foundation of a prosperous Canada.
Still, when Alberta questions equalization or federal energy policy, critics cry foul. Premier Danielle Smith is not wrong to challenge a system in which the province footing the bill is the one most often criticized.
Yes, the oilpatch has flaws. Climate change is real. And many oil profits flow to shareholders abroad. But dismantling Albertaās oil industry tomorrow wouldnāt stop climate changeāit would only unravel the fiscal framework that sustains Canada.
The future must balance ambition with reality. Cleaner energy is essential, but not at the expense of biting the hand that feeds us.
And hereās the kicker: Donald Trump has long claimed the U.S. doesnāt need Canadaās products and therefore subsidizes Canada. Many Canadians scoffed.
But look at the flow of U.S. dollars into Albertaās oilpatchādollars that then bankroll Canadaās federal budgetāand maybe, for once, he has a point.
Itās time to stop denying where Canadaās wealth comes from. Alberta isnāt the problem. Itās central to the countryās prosperity and unity.
Dr. Perry Kinkaide is a visionary leader and change agent. Since retiring in 2001, he has served as an advisor and director for various organizations and founded the Alberta Council of Technologies Society in 2005. Previously, he held leadership roles at KPMG Consulting and the Alberta Government. He holds a BA from Colgate University and an MSc and PhD in Brain Research from the University of Alberta.
Troy Media empowers Canadian community news outlets by providing independent, insightful analysis and commentary. Our mission is to support local media in helping Canadians stay informed and engaged by delivering reliable content that strengthens community connections and deepens understanding across the country.
Alberta
Albertaās industrial carbon tax freeze is a good first step

ByĀ Gage Haubrich
The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is applauding Alberta Premier Danielle Smithās decision toĀ freezeĀ the provinceās industrial carbon tax.
āSmith is right to freeze the cost of Albertaās hidden industrial carbon tax that increases the cost of everything,ā said Gage Haubrich, CTF Prairie Director. āThis move is a no-brainer to make Alberta more competitive, save taxpayers money and protect jobs.ā
Smith announced the Alberta government will be freezing the rate of its industrial carbon tax at $95 per tonne.
The federal government set the rate of the consumer carbon tax to zero on April 1. However, it still imposes a requirement for an industrial carbon tax.
Prime Minister Mark CarneyĀ saidĀ he would āimprove and tightenā the industrial carbon tax.
The industrial carbon tax currently costs businesses $95 per tonne of emissions. It is set to increase to $170 per tonne byĀ 2030. Carney has said he would extend the current industrial carbon tax frameworkĀ untilĀ 2035, meaning the costs could reach $245 a tonne. Thatās more than double the current tax.
The Saskatchewan government recentlyĀ scrappedĀ its industrial carbon tax completely.
Seventy per cent of Canadians said businesses pass most or some industrial carbon tax costs on to consumers, according to a recentĀ Leger poll.
āSmith needs to stand up for Albertans and cancel the industrial carbon tax altogether,ā Haubrich said. āSmith deserves credit for freezing Albertaās industrial carbon tax and she needs to finish the job by scrapping the industrial carbon tax completely.ā
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