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Policy for Crude Oil

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 November 2014

Anthony Scott*
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia
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Extract

The first report of the Borden Commission appeared in October, 1958. It dealt with the transmission, export and regulation of natural gas, and with the financing of Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Limited. Very little was said about the transportation and export of crude oil. This second report is designed to fill the gap. It deals with “the policies which the Commission believes will best serve the national interest in relation to the export of crude oil and the marketing of crude oil within Canada itself.”

On the model of their first report, the Commissioners start out by comparing reserves and potential output with future Canadian needs. But while they could regard natural gas as a limited stock of energy avidly desired by the United States market, they soon found that Canadian crude, like Canadian coal, had become excessively abundant. The United States and the rest of the world were so far from scheming to get hold of Canadian crude oil that they might even have been relieved if Canada had never found it. Even while the Commission sat, the situation deteriorated further. Those who sought approval of Canada's recently gained export markets along the Transprovincial pipeline in the American middle west, and in the Puget Sound area on the west coast, were replaced by those pleading for new Canadian markets to replace a falling export demand.

Type
Review Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association 1961

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References

1 Second Report, Royal Commission on Energy (Ottawa, 1959).Google Scholar References to the report are given in parentheses in the text.

2 Johnson, H. G., “Canada's Economic Prospects” in this Journal, XXIV, no. 1, 02 1958, 109.Google Scholar