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Western Canada: Oil price crash sends Alberta’s economy back into crisis – The Globe and Mail

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Good morning! It’s James Keller in Calgary.

When Albertans woke up on Monday morning, they were confronted with shocking news about the province’s energy industry and its economy.

Oil prices had collapsed to their lowest level in four years – with the largest single-day drop in decades – in the face of an escalating price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia. Alberta’s provincial budget, released less than two weeks ago, was in tatters. And the future of Alberta’s economy, which is still hurting from a downturn that began in 2014, was now in serious jeopardy.

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The price crash came as the province was already staring down problems related to the novel coronavirus outbreak, which had weakened demand for oil and pushed prices down.

And now this.

Oil producers saw billions in stock value evaporate in a matter of hours. Ovintiv Inc., the successor to Encana that is now based in the United States, lost more than 70 per cent of its share price by the end of the day. Calgary-based Cenovus Energy Inc. lost half. And other energy companies saw their stock prices fall 30 per cent or more. The TSX Composite Index plunged 10 per cent.

Cenovus later announced significant cuts to its capital spending plan and it suspended its oil-by-rail program. MEG Energy also cut its capital spending.

The federal government has offered a measured tone, promising help to people who are hurt by the economic fallout but insisting that Canada’s fiscal position remains strong. The crisis adds to pressure to include relief for the energy sector and Alberta in the coming federal budget.

Premier Jason Kenney attempted to reassure Albertans, telling them that the province was ready to weather the storm while calling on the federal government for urgent action. Mr. Kenney acknowledged that his provincial budget, which projected a deficit of $6.8-billion in the coming year on the assumption that oil prices would be double what they are now, will need to be adjusted as the year progresses.

He says he’ll be pressing for a federal response during a trip to Ottawa this week for the first ministers conference. In particular, he is looking for payroll tax relief and an acceleration of infrastructure spending to inject life into the economy. Mr. Kenney also said the province is looking at what it could do, but he acknowledged: “This is uncharted territory.”

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Early Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a $1-billion funding package to help provincial healthcare systems cope with the increasing number of coronavirus cases and to help Canadian workers who are forced to isolate themselves.

The money will help buy masks and other supplies for healthcare workers, as well as fund research for a coronavirus vaccine.

The announcement also included loosening restrictions on employment insurance payments for people who are off work due to illness by waiving the waiting period for benefits. The hope is that this will allow people to stay home and avoid infecting others, by quickly getting them money so there isn’t a disruption in income.

There was no money earmarked for the economic impact the coronavirus has had on Alberta’s oil industry.

Here’s what our columnists had to say on the recent collapse in oil prices:

Kelly Cryderman writes that Alberta has seen economic troubles before, though not like this: “But at this scale, all at once, and coming off a five-year period where the province was already crawling out of a hole? That hasn’t happened before.”

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Jeffrey Jones says energy companies need to act quickly to respond to the crisis if they want to make it through to the other side: “Given the magnitude of the drop, and the likelihood that the path to recovery will be very bumpy, many companies already know the drill: cut first, and adjust later.”

And Gary Mason is reviving a long-standing debate in Alberta about whether to have a provincial sales tax. He says the current crisis should make that idea more palatable: “Now is precisely the time to ask people in the province to make the kind of ‘sacrifice’ they should have been making for years. A modest 2 per cent sales tax would hardly impose an impossible burden on Albertans, while helping alleviate some of the damage that the price collapse is imposing on the province.”

This is the weekly Western Canada newsletter written by B.C. Editor Wendy Cox and Alberta Bureau Chief James Keller. If you’re reading this on the web, or it was forwarded to you from someone else, you can sign up for it and all Globe newsletters here. This is a new project and we’ll be experimenting as we go, so let us know what you think.

Around the West:

CRUISE SHIPS: Preparations are underway at Victoria’s cruise ship terminal for the start of this year’s cruising season on the West Coast, with extra hand-sanitizing stations being installed amid concerns about COVID-19. But Canadian port authorities, cruise lines and the hospitality sector are waiting to find out if the season will begin at all. Health officials including Theresa Tam, Canada’s chief public health officer, are urging Canadians to avoid all cruise ship travel because of COVID-19, but Transport Canada has not yet decided if the tens of thousands of visitors due in the month of April alone will be welcomed.

COASTAL GASLINK: A Wet’suwet’en Nation matriarch who supports Coastal GasLink’s B.C. pipeline project says the Indigenous group’s hereditary governance system needs to incorporate the views of elected band councils. Theresa Tait-Day told a House of Commons committee in Ottawa on Tuesday that Canada and British Columbia legitimized “a group of bullies” when ministers for the federal and B.C. governments met with the hereditary chiefs but did not meet with elected representatives. “Hereditary chiefs are representative decision-makers. They are not autocrats,” Tait-Day said. “The bands and the community have been left out.”

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ADDICTION TREATMENT: The Alberta government is giving people in the province’s injectable opioid agonist treatment program a one-year extension to transition out of the effort. The program’s participants are prescribed and inject hydromorphone, a pharmaceutical-grade drug, to manage opioid withdrawal symptoms. This change comes after the province released a report looking at supervised consumption sites, which many addiction experts have panned. One of the findings in the report suggests that a large number of methamphetamine users are frequenting supervised consumption sites that were designed to respond to opioid overdoses.

HOMELESSNESS: Reporter Wency Stueck tagged along with a city worker to participate in the Metro Vancouver’s count of homeless population, which occurs every three years. The 2017 count found 3,605 people who were homeless in Metro Vancouver, up 30 per cent since 2014. Thirty-four per cent of respondents identified as Indigenous. Experts say the increase in homeless numbers reflects a host of factors, including expensive housing, untreated mental illness and young people “aging out” of government care and struggling to find a foothold as adults.

TEACHERS: The Saskatchewan Teachers’ Federation says its members will not provide any voluntary or extracurricular services starting on Thursday. The government and the union met last week in an attempt to get back to the bargaining table.

CORONAVIRUS: B.C. associations involved in seniors’ care have set up a working group in response to the new coronavirus, hoping to streamline communications between government officials and the operators of seniors’ facilities. The communications push follows the death of a man at a long-term care home in North Vancouver, believed to be the first COVID-19 death in the country. Meanwhile, Alberta has announced it has 14 cases.

HERRING ROE FISHING: The annual Pacific herring roe fishery is winding down in the Strait of Georgia, amid protests from conservationists who say the harvest threatens a species that is critical to the recovery of dwindling chinook salmon, and to the survival of the endangered southern resident killer whales. The herring are a keystone species, an important source of food for seabirds, larger fish, sea lions and seals, and whales.

ALCOHOL IN ALBERTA PARKS: Grant Hunter, a UCP MLA, said late last month the governing United Conservative Party would erase the dictate that says adults must have food with them if they are consuming alcohol in parks. However, this will not affect whether alcohol will be prohibited in municipal parks. That will still be up to local politicians.

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Opinion:

André Picard on Dr. Bonnie Henry: “Canada is an oasis of calm amid the global coronavirus freak-out, in no small part thanks to Bonnie Henry, British Columbia’s Provincial Health Officer. Her daily media briefings are a master class in crisis communication – clear, factual and surprisingly intimate.”

Brian Pallister on the possibility of the federal government adopting UNDRIP legislation: “More confusion and uncertainty will reign. Investors and businesses will focus elsewhere. Opportunities will be lost. Acrimony will continue. And the twin goals of economic development and Indigenous reconciliation – and the essential pathway between them – will not be advanced.”

Justine Hunter on the Wet’suwet’en solidarity protests in front of the B.C. Legislature: “British Columbia has never before had so many Indigenous voices in the legislature at one time. There has never been a better time for members of the house, who last fall unanimously passed legislation to commit to human rights for Indigenous people, to listen with empathy to the concerns of the youth outside. But the protesters demanded complete allegiance with their position, dismissing alternative perspectives within Indigenous communities on the Coastal GasLink pipeline. The Wet’suwet’en themselves are divided on the issue, and are in the midst of a sensitive consultation process on issues of rights and title.”

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Israeli economy has proven to thrive despite crisis: Expert – Yahoo Canada Finance

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Over the weekend, Iran launched a direct attack on Israel. Although Israel successfully intercepted the drones and missiles, the potential for an Israeli retaliation remains uncertain. David Blumberg of Blumberg Capital joins Yahoo Finance to discuss the state of the Israeli economy in light of these developments.

Blumberg claims that Israelis are “somewhat used to these types of things.” Blumberg notes that over the past 25 years, the country has weathered numerous crises, but has achieved consistent growth. He points to Israel’s GDP per capita of $54,000, which exceeds that of some of the world’s largest economies, as evidence of the economy’s ability to “thrive despite and through downturns.”

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Market Domination Overtime.

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This post was written by Angel Smith

Video Transcript

JOSH LIPTON: Over the weekend, Iran launched its first ever direct attack on Israel with a salvo of hundreds of drones and missiles. David Blumberg is currently in Israel where his venture capital firm Blumberg Capital has offices and investments. David joins us now for more on the state of the Israeli economy and tech community. David, it is great to see you and have you on the show.

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DAVID BLUMBERG: Thank you so much, Josh. Great to see you as always.

JOSH LIPTON: So David, you’re in Israel now. You were obviously there over the weekend during this Iranian attack. So David, I just first want to know how you’re doing.

DAVID BLUMBERG: You can see I’m fine. I’m happy. I feel safe.

With my team here on the ground, we had a meeting with about 20 of our portfolio companies last night. We did it by Zoom instead in meeting. But people are very resilient here.

The streets, you can’t see them. They’re full of people at restaurants. The clubs are– the clubs are busy, traffic jams happening.

It’s remarkable how normal it is in a time when, I think, in America or other places, if this happened, people would be really freaking out. Israelis are unfortunately somewhat used to these kinds of things. This is the most severe it’s ever been. But they really did a great job with the Americans, the British, and the Jordanians, and French to knock down 99.9% of all the projectiles. So I think people feel like they won this battle.

JOSH LIPTON: And so David, the Israeli people a resilient community. At the same time, you know, David, they are engaged in this three-front war. It’s Iran. It’s Hamas to the south. It’s Hezbollah to the north.

It’s an enormous economic burden for the country, David. You just think of soldiers being called up and the tens of thousands of Israelis displaced in the north because of Hezbollah. How does the economy sustain this, David?

DAVID BLUMBERG: Well, I like to always look for history, Josh. So as we recall, over the last 25 years, there have been four or five war conflict situations plus COVID plus the dotcom crash plus a number of other financial crises, et cetera. So if we look at that, we see that over those 25 years, the Israeli GDP per capita measure of productivity of every individual working grew 2% to 3% faster than OECD countries during that same period pretty consistently.

Now, there were downturns and then they’ve come back. But over time, you see this growth. And in fact, I was looking at the data recently, in 2023, Israel achieved GDP per capita of $54,000. Now, that is higher than France, higher than the UK, and higher than Japan, which surprised me to see that growth. Because Israel, when I first started coming here, was a much poorer country.

But the tech boom in particular has really bolstered the economy. And as you’re asking, it seems to thrive despite and through downturns. There are downturns here, but the next year they get stronger.

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Coal Keeps Powering India as Booming Economy Crushes Green Hopes – BNN Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) — Built along a stretch of salt flats in southern India, the Tuticorin power plant epitomizes a quagmire for the world’s fastest-growing major economy: how to provide reliable energy to 1.4 billion people.

For starters, the 1,050-megawatt coal plant, one of the region’s largest, was supposed to shut down. Opened four decades ago, the facility is too cramped to install retrofits to meet the government’s pollution norms, prompting India’s power ministry to plan its closure by 2022. Yet the facility continues to run at full blast, clocking 90% utilization in February. Aging boilers guzzle coal from mines nearly 2,000 kilometers away — a transport distance that only adds to the nation’s emissions footprint. 

Electricity consumption in India is growing at the fastest rate of any major economy, driven by rising temperatures and incomes, which have pushed up sales of power-intensive appliances like air conditioners. That explosive equation has exposed the country’s teetering grid. Though Prime Minister Narendra Modi has promised to rapidly build out solar and wind generation to replace polluting fossil fuels, his administration hasn’t been able to keep up with demand, giving a second life to old, inefficient coal plants like the one in Tuticorin.

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In recent months, Modi has green-lit a fresh wave of power station development and extended the lifespan of many existing coal assets. It’s a decision that puts India at odds with global allies who’re shunning the fuel on climate grounds, threatening Modi’s ambitions to curb air pollution and reduce the world’s third-largest share of greenhouse gas emissions.

Those dynamics will also hand the nation a crucial role in dictating the speed of the world’s retreat from coal. Demand in China, currently the top consumer, probably peaked last year and the rate of future growth will increasingly be driven by India and Southeast Asia’s rising economies, according to the International Energy Agency.

“The message is clear to both the international and domestic audiences: We’re all in for climate actions, but India’s domestic interests will take priority,” said Ashwini K. Swain, a fellow at Sustainable Futures Collaborative, a climate think tank in New Delhi.

India’s power ministry and Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corp., which runs the Tuticorin coal plant, didn’t respond to requests for comment.

India has a long way to go to ensure reliable and affordable electricity. In Oct. 2021, the country was hit by a massive coal and power crisis, just as the economy began to emerge from the Covid-19 pandemic. Years of weak demand had led to sluggish growth in mining, transportation and power generation capacities.

Soon after the situation improved, officials realized the crisis wasn’t a blip. Energy demand rose to a new high the following summer, causing the worst supply shortages in eight years. In 2023, even though that squeeze eased at the national level, Maharashtra, one of India’s most industrialized states and home to its financial capital Mumbai, faced an alarming 10% peak deficit in August.

While shortages raised expectations that the country would accelerate the shift to green energy, India’s response was exactly the opposite. Officials pushed for more mining, abandoned plans to retire old power plants, raised targets to add coal-fired electricity and successfully lobbied international forums to adopt resolutions that wouldn’t hinder fossil fuel use.

“As a country, we should play to our strength, and coal is our strength,” said Prakash Tiwari, a former operations director at state-run NTPC Ltd., the nation’s largest power producer.

Alternative energy solutions haven’t yet caught on for financial, political and safety reasons.

More than 35 miles from Tuticorin, a dusty road leads to two solar power plants surrounded by sprawling wind parks. Ayana Renewable Power, which runs one of the facilities, sees a future in renewable power with energy storage to serve industrial users. That trend is rising in India, although far from becoming a source of mass power supplies. Solar accounted for 6% of generation in 2023, according to Bloomberg calculations based on power ministry data.

State-run power producer NLC India Ltd., which runs the other plant, is committing more than twice as much money to expanding mining, coal and lignite-fired power capacity than to building renewables, according to Chairman M. Prasanna Kumar.

Natural gas, pushed by producers as a less-polluting alternative to coal, has also struggled to compete. Nearly 25 gigawatts of gas-fired power capacity has been idling for years, priced out by other power sources, including coal. India doesn’t have enough domestically produced subsidized fuel to run the plants and operating these assets on imported liquefied natural gas is often too costly in India’s price-competitive electricity market.

Building hydropower dams is also fraught. Most of India’s potential there is locked in the fragile Himalayan region, where frequent extreme weather events, such as flash floods, jeopardize projects. The risks have galvanized local opposition against large dams, delaying plans by years and adding to costs that have rendered many of them unpalatable.

Nuclear power has seen a revival in many parts of the world for its low-emissions energy. But there, too, the industry in India has moved too slowly to make a mark and questions about safety persist. The nation’s nuclear liability law holds vendors and suppliers responsible for accidents. Many are still haunted by the Bhopal gas tragedy of 1984, which killed thousands of people exposed to toxic chemicals.

Consider Kudankulam, about 90 miles south of Tuticorin. The site hosts two reactors of 1 gigawatt each and four more are being added. In the nearby village of Idinthakarai, 52-year-old Mildred, who goes by one name, has been at the forefront of protesting the plant’s construction. She’s traveled across the country to discuss the risks of nuclear energy. 

“Why can’t these be our main source of energy?” the activist asked on a recent day, pointing to a few rotating wind turbines near her home.

In 2008, India struck an agreement with the US to share nuclear technology and fuel, clearing the runway for new projects. India has also signed deals with foreign reactor suppliers, including General Electric-Hitachi, Westinghouse Electric Corp. and Areva SA, which later transfered the project to state-run peer Electricite de France SA. GE-Hitachi has since backed out, citing the liability law. 

In the western state of Maharashtra, India had planned to build the world’s largest nuclear power plant, a mammoth 9.6 gigawatts facility near sprawling Alphonso mango orchards. 

But locals resisted selling their land when Kiran Dixit, then an executive director of the state monopoly Nuclear Power Corp. of India Ltd., visited the area.

They thought prices were too low and worried that the plan would harm the livelihood of fishermen and the mango trees. The company tried to put those fears to rest and the land was eventually acquired, Dixit said. Still, the Jaitapur project has yet to significantly break ground as the two sides continue to discuss terms of the deal.

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

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Global Economy Soft Landing Masks Growing Debt, Inequality

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The increasingly hopeful economic story of 2024 so far is that of a world headed for a soft landing. Unfortunately that same world is also becoming more dangerous, divided, indebted and unequal.

The reasons for short-term optimism are plain. A resilient US economy has defied expectations that the Federal Reserve’s barrage of interest-rate hikes would induce a recession. The UK—which dipped into a downturn at the end of last year—is already growing again, and Germany’s industrial sector is showing signs of a turnaround. Even in debt-hobbled China, domestic tourists spent more per trip over the Lunar New Year holiday than in 2019 for the first time since the pandemic, and the nation’s factories are humming a little more loudly.

 

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