Premier Wynne says Ontario ready to play leading role in economic growth

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Premier Wynne says Ontario ready to play leading role in economic growth

Premier Kathleen Wynne says Ontario is ready to shield Canada from the economic tsunami caused by declining oil prices and a sinking dollar.

While petroleum-dependent provinces such as Alberta are taking a financial walloping, Ontario’s manufacturing heartland is poised to take advantage of cheap gasoline and a weak loonie this year.

“Ontario’s economy can be a buffer,” Ms. Wynne said in an interview at her Queen’s Park office. “We have a diverse economy and it can be a buffer, in a time like this, against some of that volatility.”

It is a sudden shift in national fortunes. In recent years, oil-rich Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland have boomed, while Ontario has been sluggish. Now, Ms. Wynne’s province is set to lead the country in economic growth.

“I don’t wish for low oil prices and a low dollar for Alberta,” she said. “But at the same time, we want our manufacturing sector to rebound. So if that [low oil price] helps, then that’s a good thing.”

A new report from the Royal Bank of Canada backs up Ms. Wynne’s optimism. RBC estimates the fall in oil prices will actually help Canada overall.

Cheaper petroleum will boost household purchasing power in the United States by $86-billion, the report projects. Combined with a lower dollar, this should increase Canada’s exports to its largest trading partner. What’s more, Canadian consumers are reaping rewards from sharply lower prices at the fuel pump, saving an estimated $8.9-billion this year.

Even if they spend just half that money, it will pour billions into the economy.

These benefits are expected to more than offset a projected $2.1-billion drop in investment by energy companies this year.

“If you get consumers responding to these lower gasoline prices and you get exporters managing to respond to the strength in the U.S. economy plus the weaker Canadian dollar, it can provide a significant offset to what we’re likely going to see on the investment side,” said Paul Ferley, RBC’s assistant chief economist. “Where’s the offset going to play out? Well, certainly the manufacturing sector to the extent that they see improvement in terms of exports to the U.S., benefits from both the stronger U.S. economy and the weakening of the Canadian dollar.”

Over the longer term, Ms. Wynne is prepared to help Alberta get more of its oil to market. Last month, she said Ontario would not consider greenhouse gas emissions from the oil sands when deciding whether to support the proposed Energy East pipeline, which would carry crude from Alberta and Saskatchewan to Eastern Canadian refineries and export terminals.

She told The Globe and Mail that climate-change talks should be done separately – as part of a broader Canadian Energy Strategy to be negotiated this year – from discussions over Energy East.

“I’ve always separated those things. I’ve always talked about the need for a Canadian Energy Strategy, from the time I came into this office,” she said. “At the same time, I’ve talked about the Energy East project, I’ve talked about that pipeline project as one that we needed to do right but that we needed to work with Alberta.”

“Alberta’s well-being and Ontario’s well-being are interconnected, so we want everyone to be doing well,” she said.

Alberta will need all the support it can get if oil prices continue their slide.

RBC economists expect investment in the oil and gas exploration and development industry to fall by three per cent this year, from an estimated total of $71.6-billion in 2014, assuming West Texas Intermediate oil averages $65 a barrel. WTI crude fell 58 cents to settle at $52.69 a barrel Friday.

Numerous energy companies have already announced sharply lower capital spending for the year – with some already cutting budgets more than once – due to crude prices that fell 46 per cent through 2014. Longer-term oil sands and offshore projects were among the first to be delayed.

Investment in oil and gas and related industries, such as pipelines and oil-field services, has amounted to a third of the business outlay in Canada. However, that was less than 5 per cent of total Canadian GDP, as all business investment makes up 13 per cent of GDP, according to the report. A 3-per-cent drop in energy spending would cut GDP growth by 0.1 percentage points. A 10-per-cent drop would still mean a modest 0.3-percentage-point hit to GDP growth.

Premier Wynne says Ontario ready to play leading role in economic growth - The Globe and Mail
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

Satelitte Radio Addict
May 28, 2007
14,617
2,365
113
Toronto, ON
Another external factor which will mask the bungling of the provincial Lieberals. Why doesn't she actually do something? Oh I forgot, she is waiting for a meeting with the PM before she does anything productive.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,399
11,450
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Low Earth Orbit
How Ontario benefits from Alberta's oil - The Globe and Mail

A new Canadian Energy Research Institute study showing the impact of the natural gas industry in western Canada on the rest of the country shows the link between Western Canada’s gas industry and Ontario’s economic growth. The report forecasts that Ontario will benefit from more than $19-billion worth of GDP and more than 265,000 person years of employment from 2010 to 2035 as a result of the growth in Alberta’s natural gas industry.British Columbia’s natural gas industry add another $16-billion in GDP and 214,000 jobs in Ontario over the same period.


That is just gas. Not oil and gas.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
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Red Deer AB
They should get into something, with the iron gone why not turn the gas off and go into producing epoxy/carbon products. We can already legally grow hemp and there is enough of that to justify expansion into the next level, making parts and leaving the assemble of the whole machine to somebody else . Ontario has the advantage of the lakes being there so when 'vacuum forming' parts it actually means dipping into several 100 feet of cool water which slows curing but the final product is titanium strength rather than iron strength at you get from curing at max speed.
Ontario has just enough steel and old auto designers that they could design and build the needed plants as they don't exist in paper or metal form.
PS Fish grow a lot faster if you overfeed them, Canada feeds them and the US harvests them (when you feed them the swim into the nets on their own), if we can do it with trees fish works also and it is a renewable resource that can be harvested more than once every 40 years. There more things to build that only make money once the first load swim in under it's own power. Deliver the food (than you Prairies) to the cleaning plants and during the harvest phase put a screen of the right size betweem the food and the harvest and the ones that are small enough make to to the food and the ones that don't become fodd, a lot of food, enough you both have to sell a lot of it. The lake closest to Manitoba would be the one that could have the best water, by the time the water goers over the fall it has lost all value as far as providing income for Ontario. (did I mention winters are a great time to store cold to power the AC units during the summer, reverse in the winter and then insulated heat sinks like that allow you to eliminate those costs to a great degree after to install the devices and various pumps and valves

Run an extension cord to Hydro Quebec.....
Make a new deal with NFLD, that is where the power comes from, cut Quebec out as they are a middleman who gets the power cheap and sell high and doesn't do anything but that. Twin the lines on the existing right of ways and Quebec shouldn't be able to claim anything as it a transit only line in a deal between ON and NFLD.

Is this enough tide for James Bay to become a tidal power station?

2015 Tide Table for Moosonee (James Bay), Ontario for fishing <º(((><
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
You don't drill primordial ooze for NG products. Advanced drilling means drilling into something just a bit shy of being diamond material. Just the cuttings from drill has a commercial possibility as a grinding power. They are after treasure all right, it just isn't anything to do with oil and gas.
Love the location though. Could some Otter sized plane pull a metal detector behind it that is 100M long. I could handle mining like that.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
No shyte! Niagara Escarpment is home to millionaires' row and NIMBY's by the dozens.
How about drilling in under the falls and put in a few condos there? Is there no waterslide that siphons a few gallon off the river, It isn't the fall that kills you it is that sudden stop at the bottom, transition that into a smooth curve and the 100yd slow down area would net a few thrill seekers and the fall would be the same one thr barrel guys experienced without the danger.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,399
11,450
113
Low Earth Orbit
You don't drill primordial ooze for NG products. Advanced drilling means drilling into something just a bit shy of being diamond material. Just the cuttings from drill has a commercial possibility as a grinding power. They are after treasure all right, it just isn't anything to do with oil and gas.
Love the location though. Could some Otter sized plane pull a metal detector behind it that is 100M long. I could handle mining like that.

WTF are you babbling about?
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,399
11,450
113
Low Earth Orbit
Nope. Cute though to watch the catch up game. You have a $20-30K per head GDP to over come before coming close to SK or AB.