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While Trudeau got attention, it’s Obama who ran the climate change victory lap

Claudia Cattaneo: The two countries announced climate change initiatives on Thursday to show they are united in the fight to contain climate change. But the measures are marginal and do not even level the playing field on climate change.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau got his day within the Washington sun Thursday for supporting U.S. President Barack Obama’s climate change action.

Canada, U.S. agree to cut methane emissions from oil and gas industry by almost half


President Obama and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announce the steps in Washington, a move meant to underscore their commitment to combat climate change

Read more

Make no mistake: While Trudeau got the interest, it’s Obama who got the victory lap.

He beat Canada on the Keystone XL debacle, which led to the containment of Canadian gas and oil industry growth, and destroyed seven many years of frosty bilateral relations with former Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper for the cost of hosting a situation visit using the new Liberal leader.

Under Obama’s watch, U.S. oil production soared, a ban on oil exports was lifted to permit U.S. oil to reach world markets and also the U.S. liquefied natural gas industry beat Canadian projects to export markets.

Meanwhile, proposed Canadian pipelines remain tied in knots, thanks to opposition from the same U.S.-funded NGOs that led the assault against KXL; Canadian oil has been unable to reach export markets; the Canadian LNG market is going nowhere; Canadian oilsands production has been capped; Canadians are facing carbon taxes while their U.S. counterparts aren’t; Canada’s fossil fuel treasure trove has been marginalized towards subsidized alternative energy as part of an enormous, government-directed intrusion in the energy economy.

Indeed, during Obama’s administration, the U.S. gas and oil industry became Canada’s biggest competitor, as highlighted in Alberta’s recently released royalty review report:

“Advances in technology have unlocked significant new sources of oil and gas supplies, particularly from unconventional deposits in the usa,” the report says. “The U.S. has become a rejuvenated force in gas and oil production, one which poses huge risks to Alberta’s share of the market. This is problematic, since we’ve long relied on the U.S. as our primary (and also to some extent only) customer, and we don’t have sufficient means to move then sell our gas and oil to other countries.”

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