Those tankers, bound for China and Japan among other markets, mark a significant shift for Canada, which has long been stuck exporting its vast flows of oil solely to the United States. And with President Donald Trump’s tariff threats highlighting the risk of that dependence, the success of the $34 billion Trans Mountain expansion is stoking Canada’s desire to further decouple from its unpredictable neighbour — and play a larger role in global oil markets.
Trans Mountain “is a good start,” said Adam Waterous, a former investment banker and the founder and chairman of oil producer Strathcona Resources Ltd. “Now we have to build on it. The very fortunate thing is that we’re not starting from scratch.”
Canada’s oil industry has long pushed for more pipelines, both to its own coasts and to the U.S., only to see them thwarted by opposition from environmental groups, Indigenous communities and courts as well as the country’s own federal and provincial governments.
But those efforts are garnering renewed interest as Canadians reel from Trump’s trade attack, an episode that has sparked anger and distrust at the country’s southern neighbour, even pushing hockey fans to go so far as to boo the U.S. national anthem at recent games.
Two mothballed projects in particular are being discussed as ripe for revival: Energy East, which would carry western Canadian crude east to refineries in Ontario and Quebec; and Northern Gateway, which would haul Alberta oil to a Pacific port in northern British Columbia.
Energy East would have converted an existing natural gas pipeline to carry about 1.1 million barrels of oil a day from Alberta and Saskatchewan to refineries and a shipping terminal in eastern Canada. Crucially, that would avoid moving crude through the U.S., as is done on Enbridge Inc.’s Line 5, which crosses the border on its route to Ontario and Quebec.
“Canada, when in a time of national need, can construct nation-building projects,” Waterous said. “There’s no question that this is a time now of national need.”
Enbridge said Monday it has no plans to develop Northern Gateway and is instead focusing on increasing capacity on pipelines it already has in place. South Bow Corp., the oil pipeline company spun out of former Energy East proponent TC Energy Corp., declined to comment on Energy East. TC Energy didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
With all those hurdles, one of the quickest and easiest solutions for Canadian oil producers may lie in further expanding Trans Mountain. The system is currently only shipping about 720,000 barrels a day, about 80 per cent of its projected capacity, because high tolls to pay for its costly completion are making spot shipments uneconomical.
“The pull from the Asian markets will be there,” Trans Mountain Corp. chief executive Mark Maki said in an interview. “We should be exploring opportunities to add value to the system.”
—With assistance from Thomas Seal.
Bloomberg.com