Canada's great IOC exodus
International oil companies are fleeing the oil sands for greener pastures elsewhere
After spending decades pumping billions of dollars into northern Alberta, the world's majors are quickly abandoning Canada's oil sands. In two blockbuster deals worth almost C$30bn ($22.37bn) that came within a week of each other, Shell and ConocoPhillips became the latest to downsize their bitumen positions. Total and Statoil exited last year. In doing so, it raises the question of whether one of the planet's largest oil deposits is as valuable as it once was in a new era of abundance brought on by cheaper supplies of tight oil. What used to be the epicentre of the world's last big gold rush evidently now looks—to foreign investors, anyway—too rich. Shell's retreat, in particular, was a blo
Also in this section
9 January 2026
The Latin American producer’s crude prospects rely on a multi-pronged approach where even the relatively easy wins will take considerable time, effort and cost
9 January 2026
While many forecasters are reasserting the importance of oil and gas, petrostates should be under no illusion things are changing, and faster than they might think
8 January 2026
Indonesia and Malaysia are at the dawn of breathtaking digital capabilities. Their energy infrastructure must keep up with their ambitions
8 January 2026
The next five years will be critical for the North Sea, and it will be policy not geology that will decide the basin’s future






