Mr. Chairman, members of the committee, thank you for having me here today.
I am Dr. Kenneth Green, senior director of energy and natural resources at the Fraser Institute, which is a non-profit, non-partisan public policy research institution headquartered in Vancouver. I am working out of the Calgary office here in Alberta.
The views I'm going to present are my own. They don't represent those of any other people or those of the institute itself.
I've studied energy and environmental policy at think tanks in North America for about 20 years now, and if there is one overarching conclusion I've reached, it's that we are, in the literal sense of the words, an energy civilization or energy society.
Producing, consuming, and trading in energy commodities literally empowers us as individuals, as communities, and as a society. It's our access to abundant and affordable energy that enables the high quality of life we enjoy. So getting energy policy right is of huge importance to the Canadian people.
Recently, I co-authored a study with Fraser Institute senior fellow Dr. Gerry Angevine, looking at the question of Canada’s status as an energy superpower. Our conclusion was that rather than a superpower, Canada is poised to become an energy superproducer. My testimony draws heavily from that study.
Energy commodity production has a very large impact on Canada’s gross domestic product and employment. Oil and gas extraction contributed approximately $94 billion to GDP in 2011. Natural gas extraction alone, including drilling and support services, contributed $10 billion to labour income and $64 billion to GDP in 2008.
When you look at total employment in the sector, including direct and indirect employment, the energy sector as a whole accounts for approximately 663,000 jobs, or almost 4% of total Canadian payroll as of 2012.
Canada’s oil and gas producers contribute considerable amounts of revenue to government coffers. They contribute between $17 billion and $20 billion to the provincial and territorial governments every year in the form of royalties, land-lease payments, and licences.
But we can do more.
Among the world’s top ten crude oil producers, Canada ranks sixth, behind Russia, Saudi Arabia, the United States, China, and Iran. But that oil production is poised to increase substantially as a result of investments in facilities for the oil sands and to produce crude oil from shale formations.
The most recent long-term projection by the National Energy Board suggests that Canadian oil production could reach 4.5 million barrels per day by 2020 compared with three million barrels per day in 2010, which is an increase of 50%. Growth in the production of oil sands bitumen alone could contribute $50 billion per year in royalties by 2033 compared with $4.5 billion in 2011.
Canada is the fourth-largest producer of natural gas in the world, but it could increase that considerably. There are, as previously mentioned, projects under way in British Columbia pending approvals that could lead to a significant increase in natural gas exports.
We already sell considerable amounts of electricity in the United States, but our study found that we could double hydroelectric capacity in the future and sell basically twice as much as we do now. Virtually all of this, of course, goes to the U.S. market, which brings us to the importance of market diversification.
In the background information sent to me by the committee, there are several questions regarding market diversification. I will turn to a few of those with my remaining time.
What are the key drivers of energy market diversification? Why are Canadian energy producers looking to diversify their markets?
Well, the biggest driver of the need for diversification in marketing Canada’s energy products are the changes under way in the United States, where a combination of forces are quickly eroding America’s need to import Canadian oil and gas. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, America’s shale gas revolution has positioned the country to be self-sufficient in natural gas by 2020.
New methods of producing oil are also causing a renaissance in oil production in the United States, where there are predictions that the U.S. will overtake Saudi Arabia as the world’s largest oil producer by 2020. The IEA predicts U.S. self-sufficiency in oil by 2035.
In essence, the U.S. need to purchase Canadian oil and gas is on a rapidly diminishing trajectory. At the same time, Canada is poised to increase its capacity to produce oil and natural gas to a much greater extent than projected growth in domestic demand for those commodities would satisfy.
Canada has to realize the value inherent in its energy resources. Pathways have to be developed that will allow oil, natural gas, uranium, and other energy products to reach hungry and growing energy markets overseas, especially in Asia, but also in parts of Europe and elsewhere in the world.
Another question that was asked is what are the key advantages and risks involved in diversifying Canada's energy markets? Well, the advantages are sort of obvious. Having access to a number of new markets and growing markets that can replace the U.S. oil and gas import requirements would let us preserve the benefits we get from selling those products in the face of U.S. reduced demand. It would also make Canada less vulnerable to specific developments in the U.S. with regard to energy production or consumption, economic contraction, or political issues, because it would gain us access to countries that aren't influenced necessarily by what happens in the United States.
The risks involved in diversification strike me as being relatively limited. There are, of course, always risks involved in moving oil and gas, and we would have to pay careful attention to safety considerations when we talk about how we move natural gas and oil to tidewater. But again, these are very old technologies, well-understood technologies, and there's no reason to think we can't add pipeline capacity safely to move those goods to markets.
What are the key barriers to diversification of Canada's energy markets? Primarily it's opposition by environmental activists and first nations peoples to the construction of pipelines to transport oil from Alberta, Saskatchewan, and the Northwest Territories to refineries and coastal port facilities on Canada's east and west coasts.
Not only are environmental activists opposing the construction of new infrastructure such as Keystone XL, they are, in the words of Keith Stewart, the climate and energy campaign coordinator for Greenpeace Canada, who I was on television with a couple of weeks ago, increasingly gearing up to oppose the retasking, rerouting, or expansion of existing infrastructure in Canada that might in any way facilitate the movement of Canadian oil sands bitumen to any markets at all.
Their goal, as is the goal of Bill McKibben of 350.org—one of the most influential climate advocacy groups—and former NASA scientist James Hansen, is to keep Canada's bitumen in the ground.
Another major barrier to energy product development and diversification in recent years has been a cumbersome, duplicative, time-consuming, and costly regulatory approval process. The actions the federal government have taken to speed that process up have helped, but more can be done—for example, preventing the abuse of hearings we've seen in the situation such as the Northern Gateway project application.
Finally, what role can the federal government play in maximizing advantages and minimizing risks in Canada's energy market diversification? There are various actions the federal government could take to facilitate diversification.
As I've mentioned, they can and should continue streamlining permitting for infrastructure development. They can strengthen trade agreements and open new markets with other countries for Canada's energy products. They could help via immigration policy, as was previously mentioned, that ensures Canadian energy product developers have access to skilled labour and a trained labour pool. And they can continue to work to resolve the issues involving first nations land claims and legitimate environmental concerns.
Finally, they could help to ensure opportunities for investment in capital-intensive energy products are competitive with similar opportunities in other countries by ensuring Canadian cost allowances and fiscal terms are competitive.
Thanks for inviting me to testify today. I look forward to your questions.