Well, looks like the Alberta border might soon start at the western edge of New Brunswick:
http://nationalpost.com/news/politi...-to-avoid-shutdown-of-key-line-5-oil-pipeline
Officials in Michigan are looking to force the shutdown of Line 5, a pipeline carrying 540,000 barrels of oil and other petroleum products each day from Superior, Wis., to refineries in Sarnia, Ont. If successful, Canadian officials warn, the move would have a devastating impact on the Canadian economy, vaporizing thousands of jobs and cutting off a crucial supply of gasoline and jet fuel to Ontario and Quebec.
If only Canada had something like a pipeline from the the west to the farther eastern extremity of what might soon be in the same whipped situation as Western Canada (...
.but Greta & Wokeness?) inside Canada (=
above the Great lakes through Thunder bay etc....) to protect our national interests. Justin better start consulting First Nations in BC right now to get approval to get Oil & Gas from Alberta & Saskatchewan across Canada east to Ontario & Quebec (
or we could call them Alberta2 & Alberta3). If only someone would have envisioned a need for something like this and perhaps we could have called it something like "Energy East"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_East or something catchy like that? Shame....but maybe there might be some pipe sitting from the cancelled Keystone permit...but in the current political climate created in the last 5yrs....can't see something like this getting built....unless Trudeau isn't going to treat Ontario & Quebec like Saskatchewan & Alberta?? Anyway....
“
The bottom line, in terms of the economy, is it’s a big threat,” said Joe Comartin, the Canadian government’s consul-general in Detroit. Stakes in the project are high enough that Michigan’s decision “
certainly has the potential for damaging our relationship” with the United States, he said in an interview. You know, unlike the 100,000 jobs thrown to the wolves in the West in the oil & gas industry.
Line 5 is yet another point of contention between the U.S. and Canada on the energy file after President Joe Biden revoked a permit for Keystone XL on his first day in office. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a long-time supporter of Keystone XL, expressed disappointment but ultimately “
acknowledged” the president’s decision. The decision angered some Western leaders, particularly Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, whose government took a $1.5-billion equity stake in the project.
Ontario has warned that shutting down Line 5 would cut off nearly half of the crude oil it needs to make petroleum products such as gasoline. All of the jet fuel used at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport is made in Sarnia, and distributed through Line 5. It also carries propane used to heat homes in northern Michigan and Ontario, and supports thousands of jobs on both sides of the border. Line 5 is part of Enbridge’s mainline system, which delivers roughly 2.8 million barrels of oil — more than half of Canada’s total production — from northern Alberta to the U.S. Midwest every day. More at the above LINK.