Skip to main content

Danielle Smith's no good, very bad, $20-billion idea

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith answered reporters’ questions in Calgary on Thursday, Feb. 9, 2023, on her meetings with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and fellow premiers in Ottawa this week. Photo by Chris Schwarz / Government of Alberta

What I’m about to describe probably sounds a bit like a conspiracy theory, or at the very least something drawn from the filthiest swamps of American politics. But Alberta Premier Danielle Smith’s potential $20-billion giveaway to her province’s oil and gas industry might be the most brazen act of corporate welfare we’ve seen in a long, long time — one that’s happening right out in the open, no less. Rather than asking companies to clean up their old wells, as they’re legally obligated to, she’s proposing Albertans pay them to do it instead.

This terrible idea isn’t a new one. Before she became Jason Kenney’s replacement as United Conservative Party leader and Alberta premier, Smith was a registered lobbyist and the president of an organization called the Alberta Enterprise Group, a collection of conservative-leaning companies with deep and strong ties to the oil and gas industry. While there, she lobbied for a program called “R-Star,” which would have given oil and gas companies $20 billion worth of tax credits for cleaning up old wells, which they could use to reduce the royalties they pay or sell those credits to another company.

Even in a normal year (and what even are those, anyways?), this would be a ludicrous proposal. As University of Alberta professor and energy expert Andrew Leach noted in a CBC piece last year, “It's a free lunch. Or, more properly, a lunch paid for by Albertans. It's a wealth transfer to the oil and gas industry.”

To its credit, even Kenney’s version of the UCP understood that. In a June 30, 2021, letter The Canadian Press obtained, then-energy minister Sonya Savage wrote: “The proposal does not align with the province’s royalty regime or our approach to liability management and upholding the polluter-pays principle.”

Well, so much for that. Almost as soon as she took the reins from Kenney last fall, Smith started doing the work her former lobbyist self had recommended. She shuffled Savage out of the energy portfolio and into Environment and Parks, while her successor, Peter Guthrie, had the program written into his mandate letter. “Develop a pilot program to effectively incentivize reclamation of inactive legacy oil and natural gas sites and enable future drilling,” it reads. Notice the verb choice here: not explore, not discuss, not evaluate. No, it’s “develop.” In other words: just do it.

When she was a lobbyist, Danielle Smith tried (and failed) to get the UCP to give oil companies $20 billion to clean up their own messes. Now that she's premier, it's a whole new ballgame, writes columnist @maxfawcett. #ableg

As to the $1.3 million Smith raised (in a very short period of time) to fund her leadership campaign? Well, thanks to Alberta’s lax election finance laws around leadership races, we only just found out who made those donations — and still don't know what they expected to get in return. But it’s not hard to imagine that some of the people who donated to it could benefit from this pilot program, never mind the full $20-billion version. “Danielle Smith is giving min. $100 million to her leadership donors - companies who don’t feel like cleaning up their old oil wells,” NDP MLA Shannon Phillips tweeted.

The program might be defensible on some level if it actually addressed the most stubborn problem here: the so-called “orphan” wells that were dumped on the public by companies that either went bankrupt or no longer exist. But as Daryl Bennett, a director with both the Action Surface Rights Association and Alberta Surface Rights Federation, told the Calgary Herald, Smith’s energy minister told his group the funds will not be used to clean up the orphan wells for which there are no owners.

Instead, according to a recent Scotiabank report, the biggest beneficiaries could include Canadian Natural Resources, Cenovus Energy, Paramount Resources and Whitecap Resources. Over just the first nine months of 2022, those four companies made a combined $16.8 billion in profit — or almost $2 billion a month. Do they sound like they’re in need of corporate welfare?

They’re hardly alone. The entire oil and gas industry just had its most profitable year ever in 2022, and 2023 is shaping up to be a pretty decent one for them as well. As Prof. Leach wrote last year, “In periods of low prices, we should worry that companies might struggle to meet reclamation obligations. R-Star does little for producers when prices are low, but offers big rewards when prices and profits are high. It's backward.”

If you were trying to create the perfect example of moral hazard, you couldn’t do any better than Smith’s proposed program. And if you wanted to make it even harder for Alberta to address its growing inventory of toxic tailings ponds, for which cleanup costs could run as high as $260 billion, just show oil producers that they can get the government to throw money at them if they wait long enough.

Smith doesn’t seem to care, though, and nobody should expect her to get shamed off this path any time soon. The only people who can stop this now are Albertans when they cast their ballots in the provincial election widely expected this May. For a thus far listless Alberta NDP campaign, this is a golden opportunity to take control of the narrative — and their fortunes. Rather than fighting (and almost certainly losing) the election over who’s better at standing up to Ottawa, they can shift the debate to far more favourable ground: who’s better at standing up to Alberta’s billionaires? As this fiasco-in-waiting makes clear, it’s clearly not Danielle Smith.

Updates and corrections | Corrections policy

This story has been corrected to reflect that Elections Canada has released the list of donors who contributed to Premier Danielle Smith's leadership campaign.

Comments