The memorandum of understanding between the Oil Sands Alliance and government authorities serves as a regulatory handshake, trading environmental safeguards for expanded production capacity. Prime Minister Mark Carney’s administration made the approval of a new pipeline from Alberta to the British Columbia coast contingent upon the implementation of the Pathways carbon capture project. This alignment aims to secure both energy market access and long-term decarbonization goals.
The project centers on a specialized hub in Alberta’s Cold Lake region, designed to permanently store captured carbon underground. Once operational, the facility is slated to handle roughly 6 million metric tons of carbon dioxide annually by the mid-2030s. The alliance—comprising Canadian Natural Resources, Cenovus Energy, ConocoPhillips, Imperial Oil, and Suncor Energy—has committed to pursuing further emissions cuts as the infrastructure matures.
This agreement follows a recent consensus to back a new pipeline capable of transporting 1 million barrels of oil daily. With the existing Trans Mountain operation already moving nearly 900,000 barrels per day, this second, government-backed project significantly strengthens Canada's export capabilities. The collaboration between Ottawa and Alberta represents a shift in strategy, prioritizing large-scale industrial projects that pair traditional resource extraction with modern climate mitigation technology.

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