That might not be a bad idea. It would slow down exploitation and thus push the cost of gas up on the world market owing to a reduced rate of exploitation.
.. And when the cost of gas gets higher (not to mention that Canadians will be importing the stuff at a high cost), where do we get the money to drill/develop?
Offshore is out of the question, so what next?
Telling any corporation they cannot profit is ludicrous.
But you are suggesting that 'society' determine how much profit is reasonable?... That isn't just as ludicrous?
It costs a lot of money to build a truck or drill a well and bring it on line. Not all wells are successes.... The message is that the risk is high. If you want someone (anyone) to risk their money, then you had better have a return on capital that is attractive enough to justify the risk
I always come back to the same point, the corporations are not going to walk away from a market of 34 million consumers as long as they can profit, they will be happy with $4 billion and happier with $8 billion but the citizens will be happier with the $4 billion and that is what should count.
I see that you haven't recognized that it may cost many billions in advance to get the ball rolling on this... Plants, materials, distribution, etc... These things cost money up front and may take decades to pay-off.
That said, rather than legislate to the corporations - why not legislate that the 'citizens' be forced to equally participate in the development of the resource base?.. take the money right from each citizen directly.... Think how happy they would be with a $4 billion profit?