Alberta
Alberta Next: Taxation

A new video from the Alberta Next panel looks at whether Alberta should stop relying on Ottawa to collect our provincial income taxes. Quebec already does it, and Alberta already collects corporate taxes directly. Doing the same for personal income taxes could mean better tax policy, thousands of new jobs, and less federal interference. But it would take time, cost money, and require building new systems from the ground up.
Alberta
Temporary Alberta grid limit unlikely to dampen data centre investment, analyst says

From the Canadian Energy Centre
By Cody Ciona
āAlberta has never seen this level and volume of load connection requestsā
Billions of investment in new data centres is still expected in Alberta despite the provinceās electric system operator placing aĀ temporary limitĀ on new large-load grid connections, said Carson Kearl, lead data centre analyst for Enverus Intelligence Research.
Kearl cited NVIDIA CEO Jensen HuangāsĀ estimateĀ from earlier this year that building a one-gigawatt data centre costs between US$60 billion and US$80 billion.
That implies the Alberta Electric System Operator (AESO)ās 1.2 gigawatt temporary limit would still allow for up to C$130 billion of investment.
āItās got the potential to be extremely impactful to the Alberta power sector and economy,ā Kearl said.
Importantly, data centre operators can potentially get around the temporary limit by ābringing their own powerā rather than drawing electricity from the existing grid.
In AlbertaāsĀ deregulated electricity marketĀ ā the only one in Canada ā large energy consumers like data centres can build the power supply they need by entering project agreements directly with electricity producers.
According to theĀ AESO, there are 30 proposed data centre projects across the province.
The total requested power load for these projects is more than 16 gigawatts, roughly four gigawatts more than AlbertaāsĀ demand recordĀ in January 2024 during a severe cold snap.
For comparison, Edmontonās load is around 1.4 gigawatts, the AESO said.
āAlberta has never seen this level and volume of load connection requests,ā CEO Aaron Engen said in a statement.
āBecause connecting all large loads seeking access would impair grid reliability, we established a limit that preserves system integrity while enabling timely data centre development in Alberta.ā
As data centre projects come to the province, so do jobs and other economic benefits.
āYou have all of the construction staff associated; electricians, engineers, plumbers, and HVAC people for all the cooling tech that are continuously working on a multi-year time horizon. In the construction phase thereās a lot of spend, and that is just generally good for the ecosystem,ā said Kearl.
Investment in local power infrastructure also has long-term job implications for maintenance and upgrades, he said.
āAlberta is a really exciting place when it comes to building data centers,ā said Beacon AI CEO Josh Schertzer on a recent ARC Energy IdeasĀ podcast.
āIt has really great access to natural gas, it does have some excess grid capacity that can be used in the short term, itās got a great workforce, and itās very business-friendly.ā
The unaltered reproduction of this content is free of charge with attribution to the Canadian Energy Centre.
Alberta
Cross-Canada NGL corridor will stretch from B.C. to Ontario

Keyera Corp.’s natural gas liquids facilities in Fort Saskatchewan. Photo courtesy Keyera Corp.
From the Canadian Energy Centre
By Will Gibson
Keyera āCanadianizesā natural gas liquids with $5.15 billion acquisition
Sarnia, Ont., which sits on the southern tip of Lake Huron and peers across the St. Clair River to Michigan, is a crucial energy hub for much of the eastern half of Canada and parts of the United States.
With more than 60 industrial facilities including refineries and chemical plants that produce everything from petroleum, resins, synthetic rubber, plastics, lubricants, paint, cosmetics and food additives in the southwestern Ontario city, Mayor Mike Bradley admits the ongoing dialogue about tariffs with Canadaās southern neighbour hits close to home.
So Bradley welcomed the announcement that Calgary-based Keyera Corp. willĀ acquire the majorityĀ of Plains American Pipelines LLPās Canadian natural gas liquids (NGL) business, creating a cross-Canada NGL corridor that includes a storage hub in Sarnia.
āAs a border city, weāve been on the frontline of the tariff wars, so we support anything that helps enhance Canadian sovereignty and jobs,ā says the long-time mayor, who was first elected in 1988.
The assets in Sarnia are a key piece of the $5.15 billion transaction, which will connect natural gas liquids from the growing Montney and Duvernay plays in B.C. and Alberta to markets in central Canada and the eastern U.S. seaboard.
NGLs are hydrocarbons found within natural gas streams including ethane, propane and pentanes. They are important energy sources and used to produce a wide range of everyday items, from plastics and clothing to fuels.
Keyera CEO Dean Setoguchi cast the proposed acquisition as an act of repatriation.
āThis transaction brings key NGL infrastructure under Canadian ownership, enhancing domestic energy capabilities and reinforcing Canadaās economic resilience by keeping value and decision-making closer to home,ā Setoguchi told analysts in a June 17 call.
āPlainsā portfolio forms a fully integrated cross Canada NGL system connecting Western Canada supply to key demand centres across the Prairie provinces, Ontario and eastern U.S.,ā he said.
āThe system includes strategic hubs like Empress, Fort Saskatchewan and Sarnia ā which provide a reliable source of Canadian NGL supply to extensive fractionation, storage, pipeline and logistics infrastructure.ā
Martin King, RBN Energyās managing director of North America Energy Market Analysis, sees Keyeraās ability to āCanadianizeā its NGL infrastructure as improving the companyās growth prospects.
āIt allows them to tap into the Duvernay and Montney, which are the fastest growing NGL plays in North America and gives them some key assets throughout the country,ā said the Calgary-based analyst.
āThe crown assets are probably the straddle plants in Empress, which help strip out the butane, ethane and other liquids for condensate. It also positions them well to serve the eastern half of the country.ā
And thatās something welcomed in Sarnia.
āHaving a Canadian source for natural gas would be our preference so we see Keyeraās acquisition as strengthening our region as an energy hub,ā Bradley said.
āWe are optimistic this will be good for our region in the long run.ā
The acquisition is expected to close in the first quarter of 2026, pending regulatory approvals.
Meanwhile, the governments of Ontario and Alberta areĀ joining forcesĀ to strengthen the economies of both regions, and the country, by advancing major infrastructure projects including pipelines, ports and rail.
A joint feasibility study is expected this year on how to move major private sector-led investments forward.
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