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United Conservative candidate urges Alberta to buy Churchill port for oil sales

Jeff Callaway, United Conservative Party, Alberta, Wildrose
Jeff Callaway has entered the race to lead Alberta's new United Conservative Party, with a benchmark promise to "kill" the province's carbon tax. Photo courtesy of Callway on Twitter

A candidate to lead Alberta’s new United Conservative Party says one way to jump−start the province’s lagging oil industry may be to buy a piece of Manitoba.

Jeff Callaway says the province should look at buying the port of Churchill on Hudson Bay and shipping oil there by pipeline.

"This has so many benefits not just for Alberta, but for Western Canada and Canada broadly," Callaway said at the legislature Tuesday.

He says tankers in Churchill could carry oil abroad and fetch a better price for Alberta, which has been running multibillion−dollar deficits in recent years. The province would have to buy the port from its private owners, fix the railway going to it and build a pipeline as well, he explained.

"It’s a small, small investment to make for prosperity in Western Canada," he said, adding that a road would also have to be built to the remote community.

Spring floods washed out the rail line to Churchill and the owner of the port, Denver−based Omnitrax, has suspended operations at the grain terminal and is looking to sell. Omnitrax also owns the rail line and has stated it isn’t interested in putting up the $20 million to $60 million needed to repair the track.

Callaway is also promising to end Alberta’s current tax on carbon for home and business owners if he becomes the United Conservative leader. The levy is used to fund green projects ranging from household devices to large−scale infrastructure such as rapid transit.

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