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Canada’s Oil Giants Ink Carbon Capture Pact to Unlock Pipeline Expansion

Five of Western Canada’s largest oil sands producers have formalized a landmark agreement with federal and Alberta officials, linking the future of carbon capture infrastructure to the approval of a massive new crude pipeline. The deal clears a critical path for increasing exports while meeting stringent emissions targets.

Canada’s Oil Giants Ink Carbon Capture Pact to Unlock Pipeline Expansion

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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