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Canada's oil growth optimism
Companies are bullish despite combined effect of market volatility, tariff threats, regulatory issues and midstream constraints
Canada’s Asian pivot faces hurdles
The federal government is working with Alberta to improve the country’s access to Asian markets and reduce dependence on the US, but there are challenges to their plans
Alberta’s energy hub sees silver lining
US tariffs bolster Alberta’s Industrial Heartland exports to Asia
Gas should fare better than oil under Canada’s new regime
The new federal government appears far more supportive of oil and gas than former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s climate-focused administration, but the prospects look better for the latter hydrocarbon
Indigenous opposition may slow Canadian fast-track
Federal and provincial governments have passed legislation to speed the development of hand-picked projects, but failure to win Indigenous support may stymie their plans
Canada enters the global LNG race
Owing to social, political and geographical factors, Canadian LNG projects are a complex proposition versus competing facilities on the US Gulf of Mexico
Energy NL upbeat on Newfoundland despite industry doubts
CEO argues the upstream potential remains huge as analysts question future oil production for Canadian province’s offshore industry
Canada’s energy superpower ambition
The new government is talking and thinking big, and there are credible reasons to believe it is more than just grandstanding
Canada revisits big pipeline question
Investor certainty key to diversifying country’s oil and gas exports amid fresh talk of improving infrastructure to boost energy security
Canada to play key role in oil supply growth
Oil sands will be complemented by conventional and shale output growth and supply opportunities improved by the Trans Mountain Pipeline, but the tariff threat remains
Canada
Vincent Lauerman
Calgary
5 November 2020
Follow @PetroleumEcon
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Husky deal not the trigger for Canadian consolidation wave

M&A activity may have started to rally, but further big-ticket transactions look unlikely

Dealmaking has been picking up in the Canadian oil patch after stumbling to a record low level in the first half of the year. And late October saw a significant fillip to the trend when Canadian oil firm Cenovus Energy bid C$3.8bn (US$2.89bn)—C$10.2bn including debt—to acquire Albertan peer Husky Energy. But the blockbuster deal, the sixth-largest in Canadian history, may be a one-off. The move was based on a decision by Husky’s majority owner, not a result of financial necessity like other recent deals in the low oil price environment. Funding options, whether debt or equity, have largely dried up for all but the largest E&P companies, making another major consolidation between Canada’s

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