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Bush sending VP to Alberta
by Tony Seskus    Calgary Herald
Entered into the database on Sunday, August 14th, 2005 @ 15:41:52 MST


 

Untitled Document
U.S. Vice-President Dick Cheney is Alberta bound, Premier Ralph Klein says.

U.S. Vice-President Dick Cheney is to jet into Alberta next month for an oilsands tour, further cementing the vital role Canada will play in supplying crude to the world's biggest energy consumer.

Premier Ralph Klein surprised his aides Friday by revealing at the premiers meeting in Banff that U.S. President George W. Bush's right-hand man would arrive in September for a primer on the multibillion-dollar oilsands projects in northeastern Alberta.

It came as Klein reiterated Alberta's oilpatch shouldn't be used as a bargaining chip in an increasingly bitter trade dispute with the United States over softwood lumber.

The news came the same day crude oil prices closed at a dizzying $66.86 US a barrel in New York.

"Vice-President Cheney will be visiting Alberta in early September to look at the tarsands and there's just a tremendous amount of interest now in seeking that secure and reliable supply of oil and gas -- and of course they're looking to Canada and in particular Alberta," Klein said.

"But relative to using that as a tool to force the Americans to the table relative to softwood lumber," Klein continued, "if we start to use measures that are deemed to be vindictive, then that only creates vindictiveness on the other side and it starts to escalate."

Klein's remarks may disappoint Canadians linked to the lumber industry, but oilpatch officials welcomed Klein's comments on both fronts.

Cheney's visit indicates the oilsands have arrived as a recognized global energy source and "not some interesting science experiment in the backwoods of Alberta," said Pierre Alvarez, president of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.

"It is a proven, reliable, high-tech industry that's poised to make an important contribution to the North American energy scene," Alvarez said.

Interest in Canada's oilpatch continues to grow as the demand for fresh crude supplies becomes more intense. Political uncertainty in oil producing hot spots around the world has made Canada's oil and gas supplies even more attractive to the United States and other countries.

China has also been eyeing the Canadian oilpatch -- a point not lost on Washington. Canada is the largest supplier of oil to the U.S. and major American petroleum producers have made big investments in their northern neighbour.

Alberta's oilsands are also viewed as a major piece of the puzzle in meeting North America's energy demands.

Oilsands production exceeded one million barrels a day this year, but that figure is expected to strike 2.7 million barrels daily by 2015. The United States, meanwhile, consumes about 20 million barrels of oil a day. Cheney's visit is "recognition of the role Fort McMurray and northeast Alberta is going to be playing in the future supply of the United States and Canada," noted longtime oilpatch observer Ian Doig, of Doig's Digest.

A tour by Cheney, who visited Calgary during the World Petroleum Congress in 2000 before he became vice-president, was rumoured for months before Klein made his remarks. Officials in the premier's office would not release further details.

The growing importance of the energy sector was further recognized at the premiers' conference where 13 provincial and territorial leaders agreed to develop a Council of the Federation Energy Strategy.

As part of the effort, Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams will chair a premiers council committee on energy that will work with provincial and territorial energy ministers to examine energy issues and consult with industry.

The ultimate aim is for the provinces and territories to take a leadership role in developing energy policies in Canada.

The committee will look at the potential of all viable energy sources -- including nuclear -- to meet growing demand, improving transmission and distribution systems, and ways for technology to reduce emissions.

All premiers are to look at the committee's conclusions in a report at their next meeting.

"The federal government must engage constructively with provincial and territorial energy ministers on provincial and territorial participation in international energy discussions and negotiations," Klein said.