When crude sneezes, the economy catches cold
The benefits of diversification have long been preached by financiers and economists. Those countries too reliant on one industry naturally feel the pain of a limited portfolio. Canada is learning a stern lesson in overdependence
As if falling oil prices weren’t bad enough, a new fear is gripping Canada’s oil patch - contagion. Fallout from the faltering upstream is beginning to trickle down through other sectors of the economy, touching everything from manufacturing to oilfield services to finance and banking. Few have escaped the downturn. For the moment at least, the effects are most keenly felt in the oil-producing province of Alberta, where more than 100,000 directly related jobs have been lost in the petroleum sector alone. Cash-strapped oil companies have slashed as much as C$50bn ($37.44bn) in capital spending, and delayed more than C$100bn in new projects. But as the malaise drags on, the damage could spread
Also in this section
5 December 2025
Mistaken assumptions around an oil bull run that never happened are a warning over the talk of a supply glut
4 December 2025
Time is running out for Lukoil and Rosneft to divest international assets that will be mostly rendered useless to them when the US sanctions deadline arrives in mid-December
3 December 2025
Aramco’s pursuit of $30b in US gas partnerships marks a strategic pivot. The US gains capital and certainty; Saudi Arabia gains access, flexibility and a new export future
2 December 2025
The interplay between OPEC+, China and the US will define oil markets throughout 2026






