Alberta
Police warn public after recent distraction style thefts targeting seniors
The Edmonton Police Service is alerting the public following recent reports of distraction style jewelry thefts that appear to be targeting seniors.
On Thursday, March 7, 2019, an 86-year-old female was in the parking lot of a business in the area of 124 Avenue and 153 Street when she was reportedly approached by an unknown male and female in a black Dodge Durango. While speaking to the complainant, the female suspect reportedly placed fake gold rings on the woman’s fingers and a fake gold necklace around her neck, removing the wedding ring and necklace that she was wearing in the process. The suspects then allegedly drove away.
On Sunday, March 10, 2019, a similar incident reportedly took place in the parking lot of a grocery store in the area of 173 Street and Stony Plain Road. A 75-year-old male reported that while attempting to exit his vehicle he was blocked by an unknown female. The female then reportedly placed fake gold jewelry on his hands and wrists, removed his gold watch and quickly left the parking lot with an unknown male in a black SUV.
Investigators believe the two incidents in west Edmonton are linked and may involve the same suspects. In each incident the suspects are described as an adult male and female with a dark skin tone, dark hair and heavy accents that may be Eastern European or Middle Eastern. The female was also described as wearing a full length dress and a head scarf and both suspects reportedly drove rental vehicles that officers believe they may be switching regularly.
Detectives continue to actively investigate these incidents and believe the suspects are likely travelling across Alberta committing similar thefts. As a result, officers are concerned there may be additional complainants in Edmonton and are encouraging them to come forward.
Photos of the fake jewelry used by the suspects are included below.
Police are also warning the public, in particular seniors, to be aware of their surroundings when in parking lots and to be extra vigilant if approached by strangers who are trying to give away or sell something. Citizens are advised to look around when approaching theirs vehicles and, if they notice suspicious individuals approaching, change direction and proceed to the nearest public area.
Anyone who believes they may have been victimized is asked to contact the EPS at 780-423-4567 or #377 from a mobile phone. Anonymous information can also be submitted to Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 or online at www.p3tips.com/250.
Alberta
Trump’s Venezuela Geopolitical Earthquake Shakes up Canada’s Plans as a “Net Zero” Energy Superpower
From Energy Now
By Ron Wallace
Get the Latest Canadian Focused Energy News Delivered to You! It’s FREE: Quick Sign-Up Here
Prime Minister Carney’s ‘well-laid plans’ for Canada to become a net zero energy superpower may suddenly be at risk – with significant consequences for Alberta. Recent events in Venezuela should force a careful re-examination of the economic viability of producing “decarbonized” heavy oil.
Having amassed military forces in the Caribbean throughout 2025 under Operation Southern Spear, on 3 January 2026 the Trump administration launched Operation Absolute Resolve, termed one of the most dramatic U.S. military actions in the Western Hemisphere since Operation Just Cause in Panama in 1989. Targeting multiple locations across Venezuela it led to the capture and removal of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores. Initially held aboard the USS Iwo Jima they have been taken to the U.S. to face criminal charges for “narcoterrorism” and other offences.
In what has been termed a “$17 trillion reset”, Alberta may be at risk of losing its hard-won U.S. Gulf Coast (USGC) dominance to a resurgent rival – this coming at a time when Alberta and Canada are proposing to expend billions on “decarbonized” oil with punitive regulatory conditions that would not apply to Venezuelan, or any other international producers, of heavy oil. With U.S. forces capturing President Nicolás Maduro and President Trump declaring American administration of Venezuela to “get the oil flowing” again, the revival of Venezuela’s vast heavy crude reserves—over 300 billion barrels, the world’s largest—could flood the market with a cheaper, proximate supply tailored to U.S. refineries.
Historically, Alberta capitalized on Venezuela’s collapse when production there plummeted, due to mismanagement and sanctions, from 3 million barrels per day in the mid-2000’s to under 1 million today. This allowed Canadian heavy blends like Western Canadian Select to become the dominant feedstock for U.S. Gulf Coast refiners. In 2025, Canada supplied over one-third of the region’s heavy imports, tightening differentials and bolstering Alberta’s revenues.
A U.S.-revived Venezuelan oil industry, even if investment for infrastructure takes years to implement, would be a serious threat that risks displacing Canadian oil with lower-cost alternative supplies that also are geographically closer to U.S. refiners. This seismic geopolitical shift now confronts Prime Minister Mark Carney and Premier Danielle Smith as they attempt to implement their November 2025 Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), one that commits Alberta to produce “decarbonized” oil through massive carbon capture projects like Pathways Plus associated with Carbon Pricing Equivalency Agreements, are vastly expensive measures that could undermine Canadian price competitiveness against unsanctioned Venezuelan crude. Possibly of greater importance, Canadian insistence on “net zero” targets associated with pipelines and heavy oil production, policies that have caused significant capital flight from the Canadian energy sector, may further diminish the attractiveness of Alberta oil projects to international investors. Since 2015 Canada has experienced a flight of investment capital approaching CAD$650 billion due to lost, or deferred, resource projects – particularly in the energy sector. Will these policies and plans for the Alberta-Canada MoU allow Canada to become an “energy superpower” in this new age of international competition?
While short-term disruptions from the U.S. intervention might temporarily tighten heavy supply (and therefore benefit Canadian producers) the long-term prospect of U.S.-controlled Venezuelan oil production unquestionably represents a sea-change for international oil markets and may, potentially strengthen the economic case, if not urgency, for new Canadian Pacific pipelines to provide market access away from the U.S.
Historically, the U.S.–Venezuela oil trade relationship was a highly integrated system that was seriously disrupted, beginning in the 1970’s, by nationalization programs and by subsequent U.S. sanctions. The U.S. Gulf Coast (USGC) refinery complex is among the most highly developed in the world, one that required billions in investments for coking, desulfurization and hydrocracker units specifically designed to process heavy, sour Venezuelan crude. Importing approximately 40 million barrels of heavy crude per month in 2025, the USGC refiners scrambled to replace lost, sanctioned Venezuelan oil with Canadian Cold Lake, Mexican Maya and Brazilian heavy grades. Canada, offering a supply that was stable, pipeline‑connected and geopolitically low‑risk was the only producer with enough heavy crude to meaningfully offset those Venezuelan losses. In the twelve months ending February 2025, Canada supplied 13.6 million barrels/month representing 34% (the largest single source) to those U.S. refiners. As a result, Canadian Cold Lake and WCS differentials tightened with the Cold Lake WTI discount narrowing from $13.57/bbl (February) to $9.45/bbl (May).
However, with a federal government consumed with concerns about emissions and the attainment of an improbable national goal of Net Zero, and with terms in an MoU that will require material capital expenditures to produce “decarbonized” oil, Alberta and Canada would be wise to recognize that this geopolitical sea-change will affect not just prior assumptions about Canadian oil production (and MoU’s) but may yet work to change the fundamental economic assumptions of global oil economics.
Premier Smith has consistently argued that Canada needs to develop an “alternate reality” one in which Alberta oil producers and international export pipelines allow Canada to contribute to global energy security in ways that preclude “economic self-destruction.” In face of these geopolitical events, especially at a time of mounting national deficits, Canada may have precious little time to get its act together to effectively, and competitively, maintain and secure international markets for Alberta oil.
Dr. Ron Wallace is a former National Energy Board member who has also worked in the Venezuelan heavy oil sector.
Alberta
The Canadian Energy Centre’s biggest stories of 2025
From the Canadian Energy Centre
Canada’s energy landscape changed significantly in 2025, with mounting U.S. economic pressures reinforcing the central role oil and gas can play in safeguarding the country’s independence.
Here are the Canadian Energy Centre’s top five most-viewed stories of the year.
5. Alberta’s massive oil and gas reserves keep growing – here’s why
The Northern Lights, aurora borealis, make an appearance over pumpjacks near Cremona, Alta., Thursday, Oct. 10, 2024. CP Images photo
Analysis commissioned this spring by the Alberta Energy Regulator increased the province’s natural gas reserves by more than 400 per cent, bumping Canada into the global top 10.
Even with record production, Alberta’s oil reserves – already fourth in the world – also increased by seven billion barrels.
According to McDaniel & Associates, which conducted the report, these reserves are likely to become increasingly important as global demand continues to rise and there is limited production growth from other sources, including the United States.
4. Canada’s pipeline builders ready to get to work
Canada could be on the cusp of a “golden age” for building major energy projects, said Kevin O’Donnell, executive director of the Mississauga, Ont.-based Pipe Line Contractors Association of Canada.
That eagerness is shared by the Edmonton-based Progressive Contractors Association of Canada (PCA), which launched a “Let’s Get Building” advocacy campaign urging all Canadian politicians to focus on getting major projects built.
“The sooner these nation-building projects get underway, the sooner Canadians reap the rewards through new trading partnerships, good jobs and a more stable economy,” said PCA chief executive Paul de Jong.
3. New Canadian oil and gas pipelines a $38 billion missed opportunity, says Montreal Economic Institute
Steel pipe in storage for the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion in 2022. Photo courtesy Trans Mountain Corporation
In March, a report by the Montreal Economic Institute (MEI) underscored the economic opportunity of Canada building new pipeline export capacity.
MEI found that if the proposed Energy East and Gazoduq/GNL Quebec projects had been built, Canada would have been able to export $38 billion worth of oil and gas to non-U.S. destinations in 2024.
“We would be able to have more prosperity for Canada, more revenue for governments because they collect royalties that go to government programs,” said MEI senior policy analyst Gabriel Giguère.
“I believe everybody’s winning with these kinds of infrastructure projects.”
2. Keyera ‘Canadianizes’ natural gas liquids with $5.15 billion acquisition
Keyera Corp.’s natural gas liquids facilities in Fort Saskatchewan, Alta. Photo courtesy Keyera Corp.
In June, Keyera Corp. announced a $5.15 billion deal to acquire the majority of Plains American Pipelines LLP’s Canadian natural gas liquids (NGL) business, creating a cross-Canada NGL corridor that includes a storage hub in Sarnia, Ontario.
The acquisition will connect NGLs from the growing Montney and Duvernay plays in Alberta and B.C. to markets in central Canada and the eastern U.S. seaboard.
“Having a Canadian source for natural gas would be our preference,” said Sarnia mayor Mike Bradley.
“We see Keyera’s acquisition as strengthening our region as an energy hub.”
1. Explained: Why Canadian oil is so important to the United States
Enbridge’s Cheecham Terminal near Fort McMurray, Alberta is a key oil storage hub that moves light and heavy crude along the Enbridge network. Photo courtesy Enbridge
The United States has become the world’s largest oil producer, but its reliance on oil imports from Canada has never been higher.
Many refineries in the United States are specifically designed to process heavy oil, primarily in the U.S. Midwest and U.S. Gulf Coast.
According to the Alberta Petroleum Marketing Commission, the top five U.S. refineries running the most Alberta crude are:
- Marathon Petroleum, Robinson, Illinois (100% Alberta crude)
- Exxon Mobil, Joliet, Illinois (96% Alberta crude)
- CHS Inc., Laurel, Montana (95% Alberta crude)
- Phillips 66, Billings, Montana (92% Alberta crude)
- Citgo, Lemont, Illinois (78% Alberta crude)
-
Frontier Centre for Public Policy1 day agoIs Canada still worth the sacrifice for immigrants?
-
Environment1 day agoLeft-wing terrorists sabotage German power plant, causing massive power outage
-
Alberta1 day agoTrump’s Venezuela Geopolitical Earthquake Shakes up Canada’s Plans as a “Net Zero” Energy Superpower
-
Energy1 day agoTrump’s Venezuela Move: A $17 Trillion Reset of Global Geopolitics and a Pivotal Shift in US Energy Strategy
-
Energy1 day agoThe global math: Why exporting Canadian energy is a climate win
-
Business3 hours agoCanada’s Illusion of Stability May Crumble in 2026 Amid Increasingly Dangerous Geopolitics
-
International2 days ago“History in the making”: Venezuelans in Florida flood streets after Maduro’s capture
-
Daily Caller24 hours agoMinnesota Governor resigns from re-election campaign as massive government frauds revealed



