|
|
|
|
|
Todd Korol/The Canadian Press
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Energy reporter
|
|
|
Alberta, Ottawa and Canada’s five largest oil sands companies have signed an agreement to push forward a massive carbon capture project in the province’s north, while setting the stage for a substantial increase in crude production.
|
|
|
The agreement stems from a memorandum of understanding signed by the provincial and federal governments in November, which tied a new oil pipeline from Alberta to the West Coast to lowering emissions through the carbon capture project, called Pathways.
|
|
|
Under the new tripartite agreement – signed July 2 but made public Monday – the governments and companies signalled their support for the development of financial and regulatory frameworks that would “enable sustained and substantial oil sands development and production growth.”
|
|
|
The companies that signed the agreement are Suncor SU-T, Cenovus CVE-T,
ConocoPhillips COP-N, Canadian Natural Resources CNQ-N and Imperial IMO-T. Collectively, they make up the Oil Sands Alliance.
|
|
|
|
|