Opinion: Canada’s all about energy … to send elsewhere - - TopicsExpress



          

Opinion: Canada’s all about energy … to send elsewhere - Jeffrey Simpson (this excellent article goes a long way in explaining the merits & demerits of the Canadian Confederacy w.r.t. to provincial control of their natural resources versus Ottawa + the challenges of having a national energy vision with disparate, often competing jurisdictions...) Here’s a slogan on sale for last-minute political shoppers: CANADIAN ENERGY FOR CANADIANS! How radical would that be? Here we are in a country pleased (wrongly) to call itself an “energy superpower,” but the best our governments and energy companies can usually manage are new ways to export energy. Yes, yes, Canada has energy surpluses. And these surpluses need to find markets elsewhere to be profitable, whether it’s hydro or oil or natural gas. We can’t use all we produce. We can make money sending it south or overseas. But we could use more if we thought of energy as a national asset for use first by Canadians, or at least more by Canadians. Canada’s constitutional arrangements get in the way of thinking nationally. The provinces control natural resources here, unlike in other federations. Provinces think first and foremost of themselves, in particular how much money they can get for those resources, which invariably means selling them outside Canada. Ottawa generally stands mute on the sidelines. This silence has been particularly apparently during the Harper years, because the Conservative government applies strict constitutional reasoning: What is federal is federal, what is provincial is provincial. You can see this at work in health care. Ottawa will cut a cheque, but not attach strings to how the money is spent. This strict compartmentalization is a defensible constitutional position. It minimizes squabbling. It keeps Ottawa out of the provinces’ hair. It cuts down on costly, sometimes open-ended federal interventions in areas of provincial jurisdiction. It prevents Ottawa from being seen by provinces as nothing more than a cash cow. But another way of thinking about Canadian federalism sees Ottawa with its “spending power,” a power upheld by the courts, and the only government with a “national” vision. Natural resources such as energy are provincially owned with national implications. Where we sell, to whom and for what prices, and how we exploit the resources have fiscal-policy and sometimes foreign-policy implications. Natural resources contribute to the country’s standard of living, and to regional differences, which Ottawa through equalization is charged with trying to flatten. We are left therefore with a funny country: very rich in energy of every kind but unable and unwilling to talk about it in a national context. The best and often only approach we can take is to frame discussions about how fast, and under what circumstances, we can produce it to send elsewhere. theglobeandmail/globe-debate/canadas-all-about-energy-to-send-elsewhere/article22187185/
Posted on: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 20:57:16 +0000

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