Improving Access Will Create Jobs and Make our Economy More Competitive
OTTAWA, ON - April 09, 2015 /CNW/ - At Scotiabank's 183rd Annual Meeting, Brian Porter, President and CEO, said that notwithstanding all of Canada's potential as an energy superpower, resource companies in Canada still do not have adequate market access for worldwide shipment of oil and natural gas. As a result, virtually all of Canada's exported oil and natural gas goes only to the United States.
The inability to move forward on projects that would help Canada export its energy products to global markets is constraining the price of its energy exports and economic growth across the country, increasingly causing investors to deploy capital in other markets. Tax and royalty revenue from energy and energy-related businesses will also be negatively impacted, which will further constrain government's ability to invest in important areas such as education and healthcare.
This issue is a matter of national economic importance. These infrastructure projects have the ability to create tens of thousands of good, high-paying jobs over the course of development, construction and operation at a time when the national economy needs this type of job creation.
Governments, corporate and community leaders need to think in the national interest and provide leadership to make global market access for Canadian energy a national priority, and then make it a reality.
Quotes
"It is clear that our inability to deliver energy to world markets is detrimental to Canada's economy. It is also detrimental to our country's brand and future economic prospects for all Canadians."
"The time for inter-provincial bickering and political indecision has passed. Global market access for Canadian energy must be a common objective that we pursue vigorously."
"To close these infrastructure gaps, we must develop projects responsibly, and with due consideration for our environment and our communities. These projects can be game-changers for many regions across the country -- and not just in the oil patch."
"Through much of our history, we have seen true leadership when Canada has faced other challenges of national importance. So today, I am calling on corporate, government, and community leaders to do the same. We must make global market access for Canadian energy a national priority, and then make it a reality."
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Scotiabank is Canada's international bank and a leading financial services provider in North America, Latin America, the Caribbean and Central America, and parts of Asia. We are dedicated to helping our 21 million customers become better off through a broad range of advice, products and services, including personal and commercial banking, wealth management and private banking, corporate and investment banking. With a team of more than 86,000 employees and assets of $852 billion (as at January 31, 2015), Scotiabank trades on the Toronto (