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Economy of Alberta

The economy of Alberta is the sum of all economic activity in Alberta, Canada's fourth largest province by population. Alberta's GDP in 2018 was CDN$338.2 billion.[2]

Economy of Alberta
Aerial photo of oilfield roads and drill sites in the Pembina Oil Field, 2008.
CurrencyCanadian dollar (CAD, C$)
April 1 – March 29
Statistics
Population 4,421,876 (2020)[1]
GDPCAD$338.2 billion (2018)

All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars.

Although Alberta has a presence in many industries such as agriculture, forestry, education, tourism, finance, and manufacturing, the politics and culture of the province have been closely tied to the production of fossil energy since the 1940s. Alberta—with an estimated 1.4 billion cubic metres of unconventional oil resource in the bituminous oil sands—leads Canada as an oil producer.[3]

In 2018, Alberta's energy sector contributed over $71.5 billion to Canada's nominal gross domestic product.[4] According to Statistics Canada, in May 2018, the oil and gas extraction industry reached its highest proportion of Canada's national GDP since 1985, exceeding 7% and "surpass[ing] banking and insurance"[5] with extraction of non-conventional oil from the oilsands reaching an "impressive", all-time high in May 2018.[5] With conventional oil extraction "climbed up to the highs from 2007", the demand for Canadian oil was strong in May.[5]

From 1990 to 2003, Alberta's economy grew by 57% compared to 43% for all of Canada—the strongest economic growth of any region in Canada.[3] In 2006 Alberta's per capita GDP was higher than all US states, and one of the highest figures in the world. In 2006, the deviation from the national average was the largest for any province in Canadian history.[6] Alberta's per capita GDP in 2007 was by far the highest of any province in Canada at C$74,825 (approx. US$75,000). Alberta's per capita GDP in 2007 was 61% higher than the Canadian average of C$46,441 and more than twice that of all the Maritime provinces. From 2004 to 2014 Alberta's "exports of commodities rose 91%, reaching $121 billion in 2014" and 500,000 new jobs were created.[7] In 2014, Alberta's real GDP by expenditure grew by 4.8%, the strongest growth rate among the provinces."[8] In 2017, Alberta's real per capita GDP—the economic output per person—was $71,092, compared to the Canadian average of $47,417.[9] In 2016, Alberta's A grade on its income per capita was based on the fact that it was almost "identical" to that of the "top peer country"—Ireland.[10]

The energy industry provided 7.7% of all jobs in Alberta in 2013,[7] and 140,300 jobs representing 6.1% of total employment of 2,286,900 in Alberta in 2017.[11] The unemployment rate in Alberta peaked in November 2016 at 9.1%. Its lowest point in a ten-year period from July 2009 to July 2019, was in September 2013 at 4.3%.[12] The unemployment rate in the spring of 2019 in Alberta was 6.7% with 21,000 jobs added in April.[13] By July 2019, the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate had increased to 7.0%.[12]

By August 2019, the employment number in Alberta was 2,344,000, following the loss of 14,000 full-time jobs in July, which represented the "largest decline" in Canada according to Statistics Canada.[14]

Beginning in June 2014, the record high volume of worldwide oil inventories in storage—referred to as a global oil glut[15]—caused crude oil prices to collapse at near ten-year low prices.[16][17][18] By 2016 West Texas Intermediate (WTI)—the benchmark light, sweet crude oil—reached its lowest price in ten years—US$26.55. In 2012 the price of WTI had reached US$125 and in 2014 the price was $100. By February 2016 the price of Western Canadian Select WCS—the Alberta benchmark heavy crude oil—was US$14.10[19][20]—the cheapest oil in the world.[21] Alberta boom years from 2010 to 2014 ended with a "long and deep" recession that began in 2014, driven by low commodity pricing ended in 2017.[22] By 2019—five years later—Alberta was still in recovery. Overall, there were approximately 35,000 jobs lost in mining, oil and gas alone.[22] Since 2014, sectors that offered high-wage employment of $30 and above, saw about 100,000 jobs disappear—"construction (down more than 45,000 jobs), mining, oil and gas (down nearly 35,000), and professional services (down 18,000)," according to the economist, Trevor Tombe.[22] There was a decrease in wages, in the number of jobs, and in the number of hours worked. The total loss of incomes from "workers, business, and government" amounted to about 20 percent or about CDN$75 billion less per year.[22] Since 2011, prices have increased in Alberta by 18%.[22] However, a typical worker in Alberta still earns more than a typical worker in all the other provinces and territories.[22]

By March 2016, Alberta lost over 100,000 jobs in the oil patch.[23] In spite of the surplus with the low price of WCS in 2015—99% of Canada's oil exports went to the United States[24] and in 2015 Canada was still their largest exporter of total petroleum—3,789 thousand bpd in September—3,401 thousand bpd in October up from 3,026 thousand bpd in September 2014.[25] By April 2019, two of the major oil companies, still had thousands of workers—Suncor had about 12,500 employees and Canadian Natural Resources had about 10,000 full-time employees.[26]

Alberta has the "lowest taxes overall of any province or territory" in Canada,[27] due in part to having high resource tax revenues. However, overall tax revenues from oil royalties and other non-renewable sources has fallen steeply along with the drop in global oil prices. For example, in 2013, oil tax revenues brought in 9.58 billion, or 21% of the total Provincial budget,[28] whereas in 2018 it had fallen to just 5.43 billion, or 11% of the Provincial budget. [29]

In the spring of 2020, Alberta's economy suffered from the economic fallout of both the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 Russia–Saudi Arabia oil price war."[30]

Data edit

GDP by sector, 2016[31]

  Oil, Gas, & Mining (16.4%)
  Manufacturing (6.7%)
  Transportation & Utilities (6.6%)
  Business Services (11.8%)
  Real Estate (11.7%)
  Tourism (5.1%)
  Retail (9.5%)
  Public Administration (5.4%)
  Finance & Insurance (4.8%)
  Education (4.1%)
  Health Care (6.3%)
  Agriculture & Forestry (1.8%)
  Construction (10.1%)
Year Nominal GDP

(in bil. CA-Dollar)

GDP per capita

(in CA-Dollar)

Unemployment

(in %)

2019 334.5 77,239 6.8%
2018 334.3 78,311 6.9%
2017 328 77,765 8.7%
2016 314.6 75,447 8.6%
2015 326.5 79,324 4.6%
2014 338.3 83,946 4.7%
2013 319.5 81,495 4.5%
2012 302.1 78,979 5.0%
2011 290.5 77,375 5.9%
2010 272.2 73,523 6.6%
2009 258.9 71,156 4.9%
2008 273.5 77,068 3.7%
2007 270 77,748 3.6%
2006 264.8 78,533 3.8%
2005 248.6 75,867 4.5%
2004 237.7 74,064 4.9%
2003 224.7 71,218 5.4%
2002 216.8 70,114 4.9%
2001 211.6 69,882 5.2%
2000 207.8 69,860 5.0%
1999 196 66,984 5.9%
1998 193.2 67,569 5.3%
1997 184.3 65,832 6.4%

Current overview edit

According to ATB Financial's Vice President and Chief Economist—Todd Hirsch, who spoke during a April 2, 2020, webinar hosted by the Calgary Chamber of Commerce, the COVID-19 pandemic in Alberta and its "economic fallout will permanently reshape our economy." Hirsch said that he expects that the resulting contraction in Alberta's economy will be the "worst...Alberta has ever seen."[30]

The global price of oil decreased dramatically because of the combination of COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 Russia–Saudi Arabia oil price war. In March 2020, the United States benchmark crude oil EWest Texas Intermediate (WTI)—upon which Alberta's benchmark crude oil Western Canadian Select (WCS) price is based—dropped to an historical below of US$20 a barrel.[32][33][34][35] The price of WCS bitumen-blend crude was US$3.82 per barrel by the end of March.[36] In 2018, the low price of heavy oil negatively impacted Alberta's economic growth.[37][38]

In November 2018, the price of Western Canadian Select (WCS), the benchmark for Canadian heavy crude, hit its record low of less than US$14 a barrel,[39] as a "surge of production met limited pipeline space causing bottlenecks."[40] Previously, from 2008 through 2018, WCS had sold at an average discount of US$17 against West Texas Intermediate (WTI)—the U.S. crude oil benchmark, but by the fall of 2018, the differential between WCS and WTI reached a record of over US$50 per barrel.[38] In response, then Premier Rachel Notley made a December 2 announcement of a mandatory cut of 8.7% in Alberta's oil production.[40] By December 12, after the announcement of the government's "mandated oil output curtailment", the price of WCS rose c. 70% to c. US$41 a barrel with the WTI differential falling from US50 to c. US$11., according to the Financial Post. The WCS price rose to US$28.60 by January 2019, as the international price of oil had begun to recover from the December "sharp downturn" caused by the ongoing China–U.S. trade war[41] In March 2019, the differential of WTI over WCS decreased to $US9.94 as the price of WTI dropped to US$58.15 a barrel, which is 7.5% lower than it was in March 2018, while the price of WCS increased to US$48.21 a barrel which is 35.7% higher than in March 2018.[42] According to TD Economics' September 2019 report, the government's "mandated oil output curtailment", has resulted in a sustained rebound in WCS prices.[37] However, investment and spending were low in the province.[37] The loss of 14, 000 of the full-time jobs out of 2,344,000 in Alberta in July 2019, represented the "largest decline" in employment in Canada for that month, according to Statistics Canada.[14]

In 1985, Alberta's energy industry accounted for 36.1% of the provinces $66.8 billion GDP.[43]: 3  In 2006, the mining, oil and gas extraction industry accounted for 29.1% of GDP;[11]: 3  by 2012 it was 23.3%;[44] in 2013, it was 24.6% of Alberta's $331.9 billion GDP,[43]: 6  and in 2016, the mining, oil and gas extraction industry accounted for about 27.9% of Alberta's GDP.[11]: 3 

By comparison, "In 2017, the federal, provincial and territorial governments spent some $724 billion on programs and more than $58 billion on interest payments on their public debt, which, combined, amounted to about 36 percent of Canada’s gross domestic product (GDP). Their combined borrowing that year was $27 billion, and their net financial debt at year-end stood at around $1.2 trillion, about 54 percent of GDP."

In his July 2019 CBC News article, economist Trevor Tombe said that prior to the 2014 recession, Albertans had experienced boom years from 2010 to 2014, with workers earnings reaching exceptional highs.[22] The recession, which "ended over two years ago" in 2017, was "long and deep".[22] By 2019—five years later—the province was still in recovery. Overall, there were approximately 35,000 jobs lost in mining, oil and gas alone.[22] By 2019, the slow recovery and low earnings growth have resulted in workers getting "fewer hours, fewer jobs and, in some cases, lower wages".[22] Tombe said that from 2014 to 2016, Alberta earned CDN$75 billion less per year with the "total incomes of workers, business, and government combined [falling] by nearly 20 per cent". Tombes said that relative to Alberta's "growth path prior to the recession" Alberta's economy is "down $100 billion per year", compared to what was anticipated.[22] Tombes said that the "boom years that ended in 2014 were the outliers" and the lower earnings in 2019 reflect a "natural adjustment that's moving Alberta to a more normal and balanced labour market."[22] While earnings are lower, because of inflation, prices have increased in Alberta by 18% since 2011.[22] "The $1,183 per week a typical worker earns today goes about as far as $1,000 did nearly a decade ago.", according to Tombe.[22] In spite of the typical worker in Alberta earns $1,183 per week compared to Saskatchewan, where the typical worker earns $1,070 per week. The weekly income a typical worker in all the other Canadian provinces and territories is less than that.[22]

Since 2014, sectors that offered high-wage employment of $30 and above, saw about 100,000 jobs disappear—"construction (down more than 45,000 jobs), mining, oil and gas (down nearly 35,000), and professional services (down 18,000)."[22]

Alberta's deficit edit

Alberta's net debt was $27.5 billion by March 2019, which represents the end of the 2018-19 fiscal year (FY).[45]: 70 [46] By November 2018, Alberta's government expenditures were $55 billion while the revenue was about $48 billion, according to a report by the University of Calgary's School of Public Policy (SPP) economist, Trevor Tombe.[47]: 4  Capital investment amounted to $4.3 billion.[47] The provincial government employs more than "210,000 full-time equivalent workers across hundreds of departments, boards and other entities."[47] Tombe, cited a $8.3 billion deficit in his November report,[47]: 5  prior to the release in February 2019 of the corrected deficit figures, which was "$1.9 billion less in 2018-19 than originally expected", —$6.9-billion deficit instead of the original $8.8-billion".[38]

Alberta's current deficit is "unusual for the province", says Tombe in 2018.[47]: 7  During the financial crisis, Alberta's "net asset position equivalent to 15 per cent of GDP"−it "owned more financial assets than it owed in debt."[47]: 6 

In 2009 Alberta had $31.7 billion in financial assets.[45]: 70 

Net government debt to GDP by province March 2019[47]: 6 
BC Alberta Saskatchewan Manitoba Ontario Quebec New Brunswick Nova Scotia Prince Edward Island Newfoundland
15.5% 8.7% 15.4% 34.2% 37.6% 43% 40% 34.2 33% 47.3%

Alberta's credit rating edit

On December 3, 2019, Moody's downgraded Alberta's credit rating from Aa2 stable from Aa1 negative and "downgraded the long-term debt ratings of the Alberta Capital Finance Authority and the long-term issuer rating of ATB Financial to Aa2 from Aa1."[48] The agency said that there is a "structural weakness in the provincial economy that remains concentrated and dependent on non-renewable resources ... and remains pressured by a lack of sufficient pipeline capacity to transport oil efficiently with no near-term expectation of a significant rebound in oil-related investments...Alberta's oil and gas sector is carbon-intensive and Alberta's greenhouse gas emissions are the highest among provinces. Alberta is also susceptible to natural disasters including wildfires and floods which could lead to significant mitigation costs by the province."[48]

Alberta's real per capita GDP edit

In 2006 Alberta's per capita GDP was higher than all US states, and one of the highest figures in the world. In 2006, the deviation from the national average was the largest for any province in Canadian history.[6] In 2007, Alberta's per capita GDP in 2007 was C$74,825 (approx. US$75,000)—by far the highest of any Canadian province—61% higher than the Canadian average of C$46,441 and more than twice that of all the Maritime provinces. In 2017, Alberta's real per capita GDP—the economic output per person—was $71,092, compared to the Canadian average of $47,417.[9] Alberta's A grade on its income per capita was based on the fact that it was almost "identical" to that of the "top peer country" in 2016, Ireland.[10]

In 2017, Alberta's real per capita GDP—the economic output per person—was $71,092 compared to the Canadian average output per person of $47, 417 and Prince Edward Island at $32,123 per person.[9] Since at least 1997, Alberta's per capita GDP has been higher than that of any other province. In 2014, Alberta's reached its highest gap ever—$30,069—between its real capita GDP and the Canadian average.[9]

According to the Conference Board of Canada, in 2016 Alberta earned an "A grade with income per capita almost identical to the top peer country, Ireland."[10] In 2016 income per capita in Alberta was $59,259.

Alberta Income per capita[10]
1981 1988 1991 1997 2000 2003 2005 2007 2009 2010 2014 2016
42,441 45,995 45,393 53,748 57,106 57,646 61,163 62,518 57,321 59,254 66,031 59,249

Alberta's GDP compared to other provinces edit

A table listing annual ""Gross domestic product (GDP) at basic prices, by industry, provinces and territories (x 1,000,000)." from 2014 through 2018 with value chained to 2012 dollars.[49]

Province
or
Territory
GDP
(million
CAD, 2014)
GDP
(million
CAD, 2015)
GDP
(million
CAD, 2016)
GDP
(million
CAD, 2017)
GDP
(million
CAD, 2018)
  British Columbia 219,060.9 224,153.4 231,509.9 240,657.9 246,506.3
  Alberta 338,262.6 326,476.7 313,241.5 327,596.2 335,095.6
  Saskatchewan 80,175.7 79,574.2 79,364.4 81,179.0 82,502.7
  Manitoba 58,276.3 59,082.5 60,066.2 61,941.2 62,723.1
  Ontario 659,861.2 677,384.0 693,900.4 712,984.3 728,363.7
  Quebec 338,319.0 341,688.0 346,713.7 356,677.9 365,614.4
  New Brunswick 29,039.6 29,275.7 29,686.3 30,271.8 30,295.3
  Prince Edward Island 5,205.6 5,280.7 5,372.2 5,553.3 5,700.0
  Nova Scotia 34,747.2 35,013.4 35,549.3 36,075.4 36,518.2
  Newfoundland and Labrador 31,143.3 30,806.0 31,334.5 31,610.6 30,757.9
  Yukon 2,510.9 2,320.2 2,482.5 2,554.5 2,626.1
  Northwest Territories 4,574.6 4,621.3 4,679.8 4,861.3 4,954.7
  Nunavut 2,363.6 2,353.0 2,434.3 2,685.3 2,955.0

Source: Statistics Canada: GDP (totals),[49]

Economic geography edit

 
Alberta's location within Canada

Alberta has a small internal market, and it is relatively distant from major world markets, despite good transportation links to the rest of Canada and to the United States to the south. Alberta is located in the northwestern quadrant of North America, in a region of low population density called the Interior Plains. Alberta is landlocked, and separated by a series of mountain ranges from the nearest outlets to the Pacific Ocean, and by the Canadian Shield from ports on the Lakehead or Hudson Bay. From these ports to major populations centres and markets in Europe or Asia is several thousands of kilometers. The largest population clusters of North America (the Boston – Washington, San Francisco - San Diego, Chicago – Pittsburgh, and Quebec City – Windsor Corridors) are all thousands of kilometers away from Alberta. Partly for this reason, Alberta has never developed a large presence in the industries that have traditionally started industrialization in other places (notably the original Industrial Revolution in Great Britain) but which require large labour forces, and large internal markets or easy transportation to export markets, namely textiles, metallurgy, or transportation-related manufacturing (automotives, ships, or train cars).

Agriculture has been a key industry since the 1870s. The climate is dry, temperate, and continental, with extreme variations between seasons. Productive soils are found in most of the southern half of the province (excluding the mountains), and in certain parts of the north. Agriculture on a large scale is practiced further north in Alberta than anywhere else in North America, extending into the Peace River country above the 55th parallel north. Generally, however, northern Alberta (and areas along the Alberta Rockies) is forested land and logging is more important than agriculture there. Agriculture is divided into primarily field crops in the east, livestock in the west, and a mixture in between and in the parkland belt in the near north.

Conventional oil and gas fields are found throughout the province on an axis running from the northwest to the southeast. Oil sands are found in the northeast, especially around Fort McMurray (the Athabasca Oil Sands).

Because of its (relatively) economically isolated location, Alberta relies heavily on transportation links with the rest of the world. Alberta's historical development has been largely influenced by the development of new transportation infrastructure, (see "trends" below). Alberta is now served by two major transcontinental railways (CN and CP), by three major highway connections to the Pacific (the Trans-Canada via Kicking Horse Pass, the Yellowhead via Yellowhead Pass and the Crowsnest via Crowsnest Pass), and one to the United States (Interstate 15), as well as two international airports (Calgary and Edmonton). Also, Alberta is connected to the TransCanada pipeline system (natural gas) to Eastern Canada, the Northern Border Pipeline (gas), Alliance Pipeline (gas) and Enbridge Pipeline System (oil) to the Eastern United States, the Gas Transmission Northwest and Northwest Pipeline (gas) to the Western United States, and the McNeill HVDC Back-to-back station (electric power) to Saskatchewan.

Economic regions and cities edit

Since the days of early agricultural settlement, the majority of Alberta's population has been concentrated in the parkland belt (mixed forest-grassland), a boomerang-shaped strip of land extending along the North Saskatchewan River from Lloydminster to Edmonton and then along the Rocky Mountain foothills south to Calgary. This area is slightly more humid and treed than the drier prairie (grassland) region called Palliser's Triangle to its south, and large areas of the south (the "Special Areas") were depopulated during the droughts of the 1920s and 30s. The chernozem (black soil) of the parkland region is more agriculturally productive than the red and grey soils to the south. Urban development has also been most advanced in the parkland belt. Edmonton and Red Deer are parkland cities, while Calgary is on the parkland-prairie fringe. Lethbridge and Medicine Hat are prairie cities. Grande Prairie lies in the Peace River Country a parkland region (with isolated patches of prairie, hence the name) in the northwest isolated from the rest of the parkland by the forested Swan Hills. Fort McMurray is the only urbanized population centre in the boreal forest which covers much of the northern half of the province.

Calgary and Edmonton edit

The Calgary and Edmonton regions, by far the province's two largest metropolitan regions, account for the majority of the province's population. They are relatively close to each other by the standards of Western Canada and distant from other metropolitan regions such as Vancouver or Winnipeg. This has produced a history of political and economic rivalry and comparison but also economic integration that has created an urbanized corridor between the two cities.

The economic profile of the two regions is slightly different. Both cities are mature service economies built on a base of resource extraction in their hinterlands. However, Calgary is predominant in hosting the regional and national headquarters of oil and gas exploration and drilling companies. Edmonton skews much more towards governments, universities and hospitals as large employers, while Edmonton's suburban fringes (e.g. Fort Saskatchewan, Nisku, Strathcona County (Refinery Row), Leduc, Beaumont, Acheson) are home to most of the province's manufacturing (much of it related to oil and gas).[50]

Calgary-Edmonton Corridor edit

The Calgary-Edmonton Corridor is the most urbanized region in the province and one of the densest in Canada. Measured from north to south, the region covers a distance of roughly 400 kilometres (250 mi). In 2001, the population of the Calgary-Edmonton Corridor was 2.15 million (72% of Alberta's population).[51] It is also one of the fastest-growing regions in the country. A 2003 study by TD Bank Financial Group found the corridor was the only Canadian urban centre to amass a U.S. level of wealth while maintaining a Canadian-style quality of life, offering universal health care benefits. The study found GDP per capita in the corridor was 10% above average U.S. metropolitan areas and 40% above other Canadian cities at that time.[citation needed]

Calgary–Edmonton rivalry edit

Seeing Calgary and Edmonton as part of a single economic region as the TD study did in 2003 was novel. The more traditional view had been to see the two cities as economic rivals. For example, in the 1980 both cities claimed to be the "Oil Capital of Canada".

Background edit

 
The Leduc No. 1 well, which blew in 1947, marked the beginning of series of petroleum-related economic booms.

Alberta has always been an export-oriented economy. In line with Harold Innis' "Staples Thesis", the economy has changed substantially as different export commodities have risen or fallen in importance. In sequence, the most important products have been: fur, wheat and beef, and oil and gas.

The development of transportation in Alberta has been crucial to its historical economic development. The North American fur trade relied on birch-bark canoes, York boats, and Red River carts on buffalo trails to move furs out of, and European trade goods into, the region. Immigration into the province was eased tremendously by the arrival of the Canadian Pacific Railway's transcontinental line in 1880s. Commercial farming became viable in the area once the grain trade had developed technologies to handle the bulk export of grain, especially hopper cars and grain elevators. Oil and gas exports have been possible because of increasing pipeline technology.

Prior to the 1950s, Alberta was a primarily agricultural economy, based on the export of wheat, beef, and a few other commodities. The health of economy was closely bound up with the price of wheat.

In 1947 a major oil field was discovered near Edmonton. It was not the first petroleum find in Alberta, but it was large enough to significantly alter the economy of the province (and coincided with growing American demand for energy). Since that time, Alberta's economic fortunes have largely tracked the price of oil, and increasingly natural gas prices. When oil prices spiked during the 1967 Oil Embargo, 1973 oil crisis, and 1979 energy crisis, Alberta's economy boomed. However, during the 1980s oil glut Alberta's economy suffered. Alberta boomed once again during the 2003-2008 oil price spike. In July 2008 the price of oil peaked and began to decline and Alberta's economy soon followed suit, with unemployment doubling within a year. By 2009 with natural gas prices at a long-term low, Alberta's economy was in poor health compared to before, although still relatively better than many other comparable jurisdictions. By 2012 natural gas prices were at a ten-year low, the Canadian dollar was high, and oil prices recovered until June 2014.

The spin-offs from petroleum allowed Alberta to develop many other industries. Oilpatch-related manufacturing is an obvious example, but financial services and government services have also benefited from oil money.

A comparison of the development of Alberta's less oil and gas-endowed neighbours, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, reveals the role petroleum has played. Alberta was once the smallest of the three Prairie Provinces by population in the early 20th century, but by 2009, Alberta's population was 3,632,483 or approximately three times as much as either Saskatchewan (1,023,810) or Manitoba (1,213,815).

Employment edit

Alberta's economy is a highly developed one in which most people work in services such as healthcare, government, or retail.[52] Primary industries are also of great importance, however.

By March 2016 the unemployment rate in Alberta rose to 7.9%—[53] its "highest level since April 1995 and the first time the province’s rate has surpassed the national average since December 1988."[8] There were 21,200 fewer jobs than February 2015.[53] The unemployment rate was expected to average 7.4% in 2016.[54]: 13  The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP) claimed that Alberta lost 35,000 jobs in 2015–25,000 from the oil services sector and 10,000 from exploration and production.[55] Full-time employment increased by 10,000 in February 2016 after falling 20,000 in both December 2015 and January 2016. The natural resources industry lost 7,400 jobs in February. "Year-over-year (y/y), the goods sector lost 56,000 jobs, while the services sector gained 34,800."[53] In 2015 Alberta's population increased by 3,900.[53] While Alberta had a reprieve in job loss in February 2016—up 1,400 jobs after losing jobs in October, November, December 2015 and January 2016—Ontario lost 11,200 jobs, Saskatchewan lost 7,800 jobs and New Brunswick lost 5,700 jobs.[53]

The unemployment rate in spring 2019 in Alberta was 6.7% with 21,000 jobs added in April; in Calgary it was 7.4%, in Edmonton it was 6.9%, in Northern Alberta it was 11.2%, and in Southern Alberta it was 7.8%.[13] By July 2019, the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate had increased to 7.0%, which represented an increase of 0.3% from the previous year.[12] The unemployment rate in Alberta peaked in November 2016 at 9.1%. Its lowest point in a ten-year period from July 2009 to July 2019 was in September 2013 at 4.3%.[12]

By August 2019, the employment number in Alberta was 2,344,000, following the loss of 14,000 full-time jobs in July, which represented that the "largest decline" in Canada according to Statistics Canada.[14]

Employment by industry, Alberta – seasonally adjusted (000s)[56]

Industries August 2019 July 2019 August 2018
All industries 2,344.3 2,343.7 2,340.2
Goods-producing sector 589.6 595.6 602.1
Agriculture 49.9 50.7 48.5
Forestry, fishing, mining, oil and gas 138.3 144.3 154.4
Utilities 24.5 24.1 23.7
Construction 241.9 242.1 246.5
Manufacturing 134.9 134.5 129.0
Services-Producing Sector 1,754.8 1,748.1 1,738.1
Trade 339.3 340.0 337.1
Transportation and Warehousing 139.4 140.0 138.3
Finance, Insurance, Real Estate and Leasing 105.7 107.2 102.3
Professional, Scientific and Technical Services 187.2 185.4 181.5
Business, Building and Other Support Services 83.2 84.4 88.6
Educational Services 157.2 157.7 160.7
Health Care and Social Assistance 292.4 290.6 278.8
Information, Culture and Recreation 79.0 74.3 78.7
Accommodation and Food Services 140.4 136.7 146.6
Other Services 115.1 118.2 116.7
Public Administration 116.0 113.6 108.8

Extraction industries edit

According to the Government of Alberta, the "mining and oil and gas extraction industry accounted for 6.1% of total employment in Alberta in 2017".[11] By April 2019, there were about 145,100 people working directly with the oil and gas industry.[57] In 2013, there were 171,200 people employed in the mining and oil and gas extraction industry.[44]

In 2007 there were 146,900 people working in the mining and oil and gas extraction industry.[58]

  • Oil and Gas Extraction industry = 69,900
  • Support Activities for Mining & Oil & Gas Extraction (primarily oil and gas exploration and drilling) = 71,700
  • Mining other than oil and gas (mainly coal and mineral mining & quarrying) = 5,100

Largest employers of Alberta edit

According to Alberta Venture magazine's list of the 50 largest employers in the province, the largest employers are:

Rank (2012)[59] Rank (2010)[60] Rank (2007)[61] Employer Industry 2019 Employees (Total) 2012 Employees (Total) 2010 Employees (Total) 2007 Employees (Total) Head office Description Notes
1 1 * Alberta Health Services Healthcare 102,700[62] 99,400 92,200 see note Edmonton Provincial public health authority Created in 2008 by merging nine separate provincial health authorities.
2 2 4. Canada Safeway Limited Wholesale and Retail Trade 30,000 30,000 34,318 Calgary Food and drug retailer subsidiary of Sobeys Inc. since 2014, before that subsidiary of American chain
3 6 n/a Agrium Inc. Agri-business 15,200 (2016)[63] 14,800 11,153 n/a Calgary Wholesale producer, distributor and retailer of agricultural products and services in North and South America n/a = not listed in 2007
4 7 8 University of Alberta Education 14,500 10,800 11,000 Edmonton Publicly funded accredited university
5 4 29 Canadian Pacific Railway Transportation 12,695 14,169 14,970 15,232 Calgary Railway and inter-modal transportation services
6 5 31 Suncor Energy Petroleum Resource Industry ~12,500[64] 13,026 12,978 5,800 Calgary Petroleum extraction, refining, and retail Merged with Petro-Canada in 2009
7 9 35 Shaw Communications Communications 12,500 10,000 8,985 Calgary Provider of digital telecommunications services [cable television / internet / telephony] and community television production facilities
8 8 15 Flint Energy Services Ltd. Energy 11,211 10,280 6,169 Calgary Energy / Construction
9 11 n/a Stantec Inc. Professional Services 11,100 9,300 n/a Edmonton Architecture/Engineering/Construction n/a = not listed in 2007
10 12 9 Calgary Board of Education Public Education 14,000 9,106 9,278 10,972 Calgary Municipal K-12 Public Education School Board

Sectors edit

Oil and gas extraction industries edit

 
Drilling rig in Alberta.

In 2018, Alberta's energy sector contributed over $71.5 billion to Canada's nominal gross domestic product.[4] In 2006, it accounted for 29.1% of Alberta's GDP;[11]: 3  by 2012 it was 23.3%;[44] in 2013, it was 24.6%,[43]: 6  and in 2016 it was 27.9%.[11]: 3  According to Statistics Canada, in May 2018, the oil and gas extraction industry reached its highest proportion of Canada's national GDP since 1985, exceeding 7% and "surpass[ing] banking and insurance".[5] with extraction of non-conventional oil from the oilsands reaching an "impressive", all-time high in May 2018.[5] With conventional oil extraction "climbed up to the highs from 2007", the demand for Canadian oil was strong in May.[5]

Alberta is the largest producer of conventional crude oil, synthetic crude, natural gas and gas products in the country. Alberta is the world's 2nd largest exporter of natural gas and the 4th largest producer.[65] Two of the largest producers of petrochemicals in North America are located in central and north central Alberta. In both Red Deer and Edmonton, world class polyethylene and vinyl manufacturers produce products shipped all over the world, and Edmonton's oil refineries provide the raw materials for a large petrochemical industry to the east of Edmonton. Since the early 1940s, Alberta had supplied oil and gas to the rest of Canada and the United States. The Athabasca River region produces oil for internal and external use. The Athabasca Oil Sands contain the largest proven reserves of oil in the world outside Saudi Arabia.

The Athabasca Oil Sands (sometimes known as the Athabasca Tar sands) have estimated unconventional oil reserves approximately equal to the conventional oil reserves of the rest of the world, estimated to be 1.6 trillion barrels (250×10^9 m3). With the development of new extraction methods such as steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD), which was developed in Alberta, bitumen and synthetic crude oil can be produced at costs close to those of conventional crude. Many companies employ both conventional strip mining and non-conventional in situ methods to extract the bitumen from the oil sands. With current technology and at current prices, about 315 billion barrels (50.1×10^9 m3) of bitumen are recoverable. Fort McMurray, one of Canada's fastest growing cities, has grown enormously in recent years because of the large corporations which have taken on the task of oil production. As of late 2006 there were over $100 billion in oil sands projects under construction or in the planning stages in northeastern Alberta.

Another factor determining the viability of oil extraction from the oil sands was the price of oil. The oil price increases since 2003 made it more than profitable to extract this oil, which in the past would give little profit or even a loss.

Alberta's economy was negatively impacted by the 2015-2016 oil glut with a record high volume of worldwide oil inventories in storage,[15] with global crude oil collapsing at near ten-year low prices.[16][17][18] The United States doubled its 2008 production levels mainly due to substantial improvements in shale "fracking" technology, OPEC members consistently exceeded their production ceiling, and China experienced a marked slowdown in economic growth and crude oil imports.[16][17][18][66][67]

Mining and Oil and Gas Extraction Industry (2017)[68]

Alberta Mining and Oil and Gas Extraction Industry
Employment 2,286,900 140,300
Employment Share N/A 6.1%
Unemployment 194,700 8,800
Unemployment rate 7.8% 5.9%
  • Data Source: Statistics Canada, Labour Force Survey, CANSIM Table 282–0008, 2017 "Employment share is obtained by dividing the number of employment in this industry by total employment in Alberta."[68]

Natural gas edit

Natural gas has been found at several points, and in 1999, the production of natural gas liquids (ethane, propane, and butanes) totalled 172.8 million barrels (27.47×10^6 m3), valued at $2.27 billion. Alberta also provides 13% of all the natural gas used in the United States.

Notable gas reserves were discovered in the 1883 near Medicine Hat.[69][70] The town of Medicine Hat began using gas for lighting the town, and supplying light and fuel for the people, and a number of industries using the gas for manufacturing.

One of North America's benchmarks is Alberta gas-trading price—the AECO "C" spot price.[71]

In 2018, 69% of the marketable natural gas in Canada was produced in Alberta.[72] Forty nine per cent of Alberta's natural gas production is consumed in Alberta.[71] In Alberta, the average household uses 135 gigajoules (38,000 kWh) of natural gas annually.[73] Domestic demand for natural gas is divided across sectors, with the highest demand—83% coming from "industrial, electrical generation, transportation and other sectors," and 17 percent going towards residential and commercial sectors.[71] Of the provinces, Alberta is the largest consumer of natural gas at 3.9 billion cubic feet per day.[74]

By August 2019, the Financial Post said that "AECO daily and monthly natural gas prices" were at the lowest they have been since 1992.[75] Canada's largest natural gas producer, Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., announced in early August that it had "shut in gas production of 27,000 million cubic feet per day because of depressed prices.[75] Previously natural gas pipeline drilled in the southern Alberta and shipped to markets in Eastern Canada. By 2019, the entire natural gas industry had was primarily operating in northwestern Alberta and northeastern B.C., which resulted in strained infrastructure. New systems will not be complete until 2021 or 2023.[75] In September 25, 2017 Alberta's benchmark AECO natural gas prices fell into "negative territory – "meaning producers have had to pay customers to take their gas".[76] It happened again in early October with the price per gigajoule dropping to -7 cents.[76] TransCanada (now TC Energy Corp)—which "owns and operates Alberta's "largest natural gas gathering and transmission system, interrupted its pipeline service in the fall of 2017 to complete field maintenance on the Alberta system.[76] In July 2018, RS Energy Group's energy analyst Samir Kayande, said that faced with a glut of natural gas across North America, the continental market price was $3 per gigajoule.[77] Alberta is "awash" with natural gas but faces pipeline bottlenecks.[77] CEOs of nine Alberta natural gas producers requested the Kenney government to mandate production cuts to deal with the crisis.[77] On June 30, the AECO price of gas dropped to 11 cents per gigajoule, because of maintenance issues with the pipeline giant TC Energy Corp.[78]

In 2003 Alberta produced 4.97 trillion cubic feet (141×10^9 m3) of marketable natural gas.[79] That year, 62% of Alberta's natural gas was shipped to the United States, 24% was used within Alberta, and 14% was used in the rest of Canada.[79] In 2006, Alberta consumed 1.45 trillion cubic feet (41×10^9 m3) of natural gas. The rest was exported across Canada and to the United States.[citation needed] Royalties to Alberta from natural gas and its byproducts are larger than royalties from crude oil and bitumen.[citation needed] In 2006, there were 13,473 successful natural gas wells drilled in Alberta: 12,029 conventional gas wells and 1,444 coalbed methane wells.[citation needed] There may be up to 500 trillion cubic feet (14×10^12 m3) of coalbed methane in Alberta, although it is unknown how much of this gas might be recoverable.[citation needed] Alberta has one of the most extensive natural gas systems in the world as part of its energy infrastructure, with 39,000 kilometres (24,000 mi) of energy related pipelines.[citation needed]

Coal edit

 
Remains of the former Atlas Coal Mine, near Drumheller, now a National Historic Site of Canada.

Coal has been mined in Alberta since the late 19th century. Over 1800 mines have operated in Alberta since then.[70]

The coal industry was vital to the early development of several communities, especially those in the foothills and along deep river valleys where coal was close to the surface.

Alberta is still a major coal producer, every two weeks Alberta produces enough coal to fill the Sky Dome in Toronto.[70]

Much of that coal is burned in Alberta for electricity generation. By 2008, Alberta used over 25 million tonnes of coal annually to generate electricity.[70] However, Alberta is set to retire coal power by 2023, ahead of 2030 provincial deadline.[80]

Alberta has vast coal resources and 70 per cent of Canada's coal reserves are located in Alberta. This amounts to 33.6 Gigatonnes.[70]

Vast beds of coal are found extending for hundreds of miles, a short distance below the surface of the plains. The coal belongs to the Cretaceous beds, and while not so heavy as that of the Coal Measures in England is of excellent quality[citation needed]. In the valley of the Bow River, alongside the Canadian Pacific Railway, valuable beds of anthracite coal are still worked. The usual coal deposits of the area of bituminous or semi-bituminous coal. These are largely worked at Lethbridge in southern Alberta and Edmonton in the centre of the province. Many other parts of the province have pits for private use.

Electricity edit

As of June 2016, Alberta's generating capacity was 16,261 MW,[81] and Alberta has about 26,000 kilometres (16,200 mi) of transmission lines.[82]

Alberta has 1491 megawatts of wind power capacity.[81]

Production of electricity in Alberta in 2016 by source:

Generation GWh Share by Fuel
Coal 42,227 50.2%
Natural Gas 33,184 39.4%
Hydro 1,773 2.1%
Wind 4,408 5.2%
Biomass 2,201 2.6%
Others 338 0.4%
Total 84,132 100%

Alberta has added 9,000 MW of new supply since 1998.[81]

Peak for power use in one day was set on July 9, 2015 – 10,520 MW.[83]

Mineral mining edit

Building stones mined in Alberta include Rundle stone, and Paskapoo sandstone.

Diamonds were first found in Alberta in 1958, and many stones have been found since, although to date no large-scale mines have been developed.[70]

Manufacturing edit

The Edmonton area, and in particular Nisku is a major centre for manufacturing oil and gas related equipment. As well Edmonton's Refinery Row is home to a petrochemical industry.

According to a 2016 Statistics Canada report Alberta's manufacturing sales year-over-year sales fell 13.2 per cent, with a loss of almost four per cent from December to January. Alberta's economy continued to shrink because of the collapse of the oil and gas sector. The petroleum and coal product manufacturing industry is now third— behind food and chemicals.[84]

Biotechnology edit

Several companies and services in the biotech sector are clustered around the University of Alberta, for example ColdFX.

Food processing edit

Owing to the strength of agriculture, food processing was once a major part of the economies of Edmonton and Calgary, but this sector has increasingly moved to smaller centres such as Brooks, the home of XL Foods, responsible for one third of Canada's beef processing in 2011.

Transportation edit

 
Headquarters of the airline WestJet, in Calgary.

Edmonton is a major distribution centre for northern communities, hence the nickname "Gateway to the North". Edmonton is one of CN Rail's most important hubs. Since 1996, Canadian Pacific Railway has its headquarters in downtown Calgary.

WestJet, Canada's second largest air carrier, is headquartered in Calgary, by Calgary International Airport, which serves as the airline's primary hub.[85] Prior to its dissolution, Canadian Airlines was headquartered in Calgary by the airport.[86] Prior to its dissolution, Air Canada subsidiary Zip was headquartered in Calgary.[87]

Agriculture and forestry edit

 
Grain elevator in southern Alberta

Agriculture edit

 
 
 
 

In the past, cattle, horses, and sheep were reared in the southern prairie region on ranches or smaller holdings. Currently Alberta produces cattle valued at over $3.3 billion, as well as other livestock in lesser quantities. In this region irrigation is widely used. Wheat, accounting for almost half of the $2 billion agricultural economy, is supplemented by canola,[88] barley, rye, sugar beets, and other mixed farming. In 2011, Alberta producers seeded an estimated total of 17,900,000,000 acres (7.2 billion hectares; 28,000,000 square miles) to spring wheat, durum, barley, oats, mixed grains, triticale, canola and dry peas. Of the total seeded area, 94 per cent was harvested as grains and oilseeds and six per cent as greenfeed and silage.[89] Saudi Arabia is a major export target especially for wheat and processed potato products. SA having decided to phase out their own forage and cereal production, Alberta expects this to be an opportunity to fill livestock feed demand in the kingdom.[90]

Agriculture has a significant position in the province's economy. Over three million cattle are residents of the province at one time or another,[91] and Albertan beef has a healthy worldwide market. Although beef could also be a major export to Saudi Arabia, as with wheat and potatoes above, market access is lacking at the moment.[90] Nearly one half of all Canadian beef is produced in Alberta. Alberta is one of the prime producers of plains buffalo (bison) for the consumer market. Sheep for wool and lamb are also raised.

Wheat and canola are primary farm crops, with Alberta leading the provinces in spring wheat production, with other grains also prominent. Much of the farming is dryland farming, often with fallow seasons interspersed with cultivation. Continuous cropping (in which there is no fallow season) is gradually becoming a more common mode of production because of increased profits and a reduction of soil erosion. Across the province, the once common grain elevator is slowly being lost as rail lines are decreased and farmers now truck the grain to central points.

Clubroot (Plasmodiophora brassicae) is a costly disease of Brassicaceae here including canola.[88] In several experiments by Peng et al., out of fungicides, biofungicides, inoculation with beneficial microbes, cultivar resistance, and crop rotation, only genetic resistance combined with more than two years rotation worked – susceptible cultivars rotated with other crops did not produce enough improvement.[88]

Alberta is the leading beekeeping province of Canada, with some beekeepers wintering hives indoors in specially designed barns in southern Alberta, then migrating north during the summer into the Peace River valley where the season is short but the working days are long for honeybees to produce honey from clover and fireweed. Hybrid canola also requires bee pollination, and some beekeepers service this need.

Forestry edit

The vast northern forest reserves of softwood allow Alberta to produce large quantities of lumber, oriented strand board (OSB) and plywood, and several plants in northern Alberta supply North America and the Pacific Rim nations with bleached wood pulp and newsprint.

In 1999, lumber products from Alberta were valued at $4.1 billion of which 72% were exported around the world. Since forests cover approximately 59% of the province's land area, the government allows about 23.3 million cubic metres (820×10^6 cu ft) to be harvested annually from the forests on public lands.

Services edit

Despite the high profile of the extractive industries, Alberta has a mature economy and most people work in services. In 2014 there were 1,635.8 thousand people employed in the services-producing sector. Since then, the number has steadily increased to 1754.8 thousand jobs by August 2019, which is an increase of 16.7 thousand jobs from August 2018[92] This includes wholesale and retail trade; transportation and warehousing; finance, insurance, real estate, rental and leasing; professional, scientific and technical services; business, building and other support services; educational services; health care and social assistance; information, culture and recreation; accommodation and food services; other services (except public administration) and public administration.[92]

Finance edit

The TSX Venture Exchange is headquartered in Calgary. The city has the second highest number of corporate head offices in Canada after Toronto, and the financial services industry in Calgary has developed to support them. All major banks including the Big Five maintain corporate offices in Calgary, along with smaller banks such as Equitable Group. Recently there has also been a number of fintech companies founded in Calgary such as the National Digital Asset Exchange and Neo Financial, founded by the Skip-the-Dishes team.[93][94]

One of Canada's largest accounting firms, MNP LLP, is also headquartered in Calgary.[95]

Edmonton hosts the headquarters of the only major Canadian banks west of Toronto: Canadian Western Bank, and ATB Financial, as well as the only province-wide credit union, Servus Credit Union.

Government edit

Despite Alberta's reputation as a "small government" province, many health care and education professionals are lured to Alberta from other provinces by the higher wages the Alberta government is able to offer because of oil revenues. In 2014 the median household income in Alberta was $100,000 with the average weekly wage at $1,163—23 per cent higher than the Canadian national average.[96]

In their May 2018 report co-authored by C. D. Howe Institute's President and CEO, William B.P. Robson, evaluating "the budgets, estimates and public accounts" of 2017/18 fiscal year that were tabled by senior governments in the Canadian provinces and the federal government in terms of reporting financial information, appropriately, with transparency, and in a timely fashion, Alberta and New Brunswick ranked highest.[97]: 1  The report also said that, prior to 2016, Alberta had scored poorly in comparison with other provinces, because of "confusing array of "operating," "saving" and "capital" accounts that were not Public Sector Accounting Standards (PSAS) consistent."[97]: 12  but since 2016, Alberta has received A-plus grades.[97]: 12  The report said that Alberta and New Brunswick in FY2017 provided "straightforward reconciliations of results with budget intentions, their auditors record no reservations, and their budgets and public accounts are timely."[97]: 12 

Technology edit

Alberta has a burgeoning high tech sector, including prominent technology companies iStockPhoto, Shareworks, Benevity, and Attabotics in Calgary, and Bioware and AltaML in Edmonton.[98] Growth in Calgary's technology sector, particularly at Benevity, fueled predictions of a modest economic recovery in February 2020.[99]

See also edit

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External links edit

  • CBC Digital Archives - Striking Oil in Alberta

economy, alberta, economy, alberta, economic, activity, alberta, canada, fourth, largest, province, population, alberta, 2018, billion, aerial, photo, oilfield, roads, drill, sites, pembina, field, 2008, currencycanadian, dollar, fiscal, yearapril, march, 29st. The economy of Alberta is the sum of all economic activity in Alberta Canada s fourth largest province by population Alberta s GDP in 2018 was CDN 338 2 billion 2 Economy of AlbertaAerial photo of oilfield roads and drill sites in the Pembina Oil Field 2008 CurrencyCanadian dollar CAD C Fiscal yearApril 1 March 29StatisticsPopulation4 421 876 2020 1 GDPCAD 338 2 billion 2018 All values unless otherwise stated are in US dollars Although Alberta has a presence in many industries such as agriculture forestry education tourism finance and manufacturing the politics and culture of the province have been closely tied to the production of fossil energy since the 1940s Alberta with an estimated 1 4 billion cubic metres of unconventional oil resource in the bituminous oil sands leads Canada as an oil producer 3 In 2018 Alberta s energy sector contributed over 71 5 billion to Canada s nominal gross domestic product 4 According to Statistics Canada in May 2018 the oil and gas extraction industry reached its highest proportion of Canada s national GDP since 1985 exceeding 7 and surpass ing banking and insurance 5 with extraction of non conventional oil from the oilsands reaching an impressive all time high in May 2018 5 With conventional oil extraction climbed up to the highs from 2007 the demand for Canadian oil was strong in May 5 From 1990 to 2003 Alberta s economy grew by 57 compared to 43 for all of Canada the strongest economic growth of any region in Canada 3 In 2006 Alberta s per capita GDP was higher than all US states and one of the highest figures in the world In 2006 the deviation from the national average was the largest for any province in Canadian history 6 Alberta s per capita GDP in 2007 was by far the highest of any province in Canada at C 74 825 approx US 75 000 Alberta s per capita GDP in 2007 was 61 higher than the Canadian average of C 46 441 and more than twice that of all the Maritime provinces From 2004 to 2014 Alberta s exports of commodities rose 91 reaching 121 billion in 2014 and 500 000 new jobs were created 7 In 2014 Alberta s real GDP by expenditure grew by 4 8 the strongest growth rate among the provinces 8 In 2017 Alberta s real per capita GDP the economic output per person was 71 092 compared to the Canadian average of 47 417 9 In 2016 Alberta s A grade on its income per capita was based on the fact that it was almost identical to that of the top peer country Ireland 10 The energy industry provided 7 7 of all jobs in Alberta in 2013 7 and 140 300 jobs representing 6 1 of total employment of 2 286 900 in Alberta in 2017 11 The unemployment rate in Alberta peaked in November 2016 at 9 1 Its lowest point in a ten year period from July 2009 to July 2019 was in September 2013 at 4 3 12 The unemployment rate in the spring of 2019 in Alberta was 6 7 with 21 000 jobs added in April 13 By July 2019 the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate had increased to 7 0 12 By August 2019 the employment number in Alberta was 2 344 000 following the loss of 14 000 full time jobs in July which represented the largest decline in Canada according to Statistics Canada 14 Beginning in June 2014 the record high volume of worldwide oil inventories in storage referred to as a global oil glut 15 caused crude oil prices to collapse at near ten year low prices 16 17 18 By 2016 West Texas Intermediate WTI the benchmark light sweet crude oil reached its lowest price in ten years US 26 55 In 2012 the price of WTI had reached US 125 and in 2014 the price was 100 By February 2016 the price of Western Canadian Select WCS the Alberta benchmark heavy crude oil was US 14 10 19 20 the cheapest oil in the world 21 Alberta boom years from 2010 to 2014 ended with a long and deep recession that began in 2014 driven by low commodity pricing ended in 2017 22 By 2019 five years later Alberta was still in recovery Overall there were approximately 35 000 jobs lost in mining oil and gas alone 22 Since 2014 sectors that offered high wage employment of 30 and above saw about 100 000 jobs disappear construction down more than 45 000 jobs mining oil and gas down nearly 35 000 and professional services down 18 000 according to the economist Trevor Tombe 22 There was a decrease in wages in the number of jobs and in the number of hours worked The total loss of incomes from workers business and government amounted to about 20 percent or about CDN 75 billion less per year 22 Since 2011 prices have increased in Alberta by 18 22 However a typical worker in Alberta still earns more than a typical worker in all the other provinces and territories 22 By March 2016 Alberta lost over 100 000 jobs in the oil patch 23 In spite of the surplus with the low price of WCS in 2015 99 of Canada s oil exports went to the United States 24 and in 2015 Canada was still their largest exporter of total petroleum 3 789 thousand bpd in September 3 401 thousand bpd in October up from 3 026 thousand bpd in September 2014 25 By April 2019 two of the major oil companies still had thousands of workers Suncor had about 12 500 employees and Canadian Natural Resources had about 10 000 full time employees 26 Alberta has the lowest taxes overall of any province or territory in Canada 27 due in part to having high resource tax revenues However overall tax revenues from oil royalties and other non renewable sources has fallen steeply along with the drop in global oil prices For example in 2013 oil tax revenues brought in 9 58 billion or 21 of the total Provincial budget 28 whereas in 2018 it had fallen to just 5 43 billion or 11 of the Provincial budget 29 In the spring of 2020 Alberta s economy suffered from the economic fallout of both the COVID 19 pandemic and the 2020 Russia Saudi Arabia oil price war 30 Contents 1 Data 2 Current overview 3 Alberta s deficit 4 Alberta s credit rating 5 Alberta s real per capita GDP 6 Alberta s GDP compared to other provinces 7 Economic geography 7 1 Economic regions and cities 7 1 1 Calgary and Edmonton 7 1 1 1 Calgary Edmonton Corridor 7 1 1 2 Calgary Edmonton rivalry 8 Background 9 Employment 9 1 Extraction industries 9 2 Largest employers of Alberta 10 Sectors 10 1 Oil and gas extraction industries 10 1 1 Natural gas 10 2 Coal 10 3 Electricity 10 4 Mineral mining 10 5 Manufacturing 10 6 Biotechnology 10 7 Food processing 10 8 Transportation 10 9 Agriculture and forestry 10 9 1 Agriculture 10 9 2 Forestry 10 10 Services 10 10 1 Finance 10 10 2 Government 10 11 Technology 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksData editGDP by sector 2016 31 Oil Gas amp Mining 16 4 Manufacturing 6 7 Transportation amp Utilities 6 6 Business Services 11 8 Real Estate 11 7 Tourism 5 1 Retail 9 5 Public Administration 5 4 Finance amp Insurance 4 8 Education 4 1 Health Care 6 3 Agriculture amp Forestry 1 8 Construction 10 1 Year Nominal GDP in bil CA Dollar GDP per capita in CA Dollar Unemployment in 2019 334 5 77 239 6 8 2018 334 3 78 311 6 9 2017 328 77 765 8 7 2016 314 6 75 447 8 6 2015 326 5 79 324 4 6 2014 338 3 83 946 4 7 2013 319 5 81 495 4 5 2012 302 1 78 979 5 0 2011 290 5 77 375 5 9 2010 272 2 73 523 6 6 2009 258 9 71 156 4 9 2008 273 5 77 068 3 7 2007 270 77 748 3 6 2006 264 8 78 533 3 8 2005 248 6 75 867 4 5 2004 237 7 74 064 4 9 2003 224 7 71 218 5 4 2002 216 8 70 114 4 9 2001 211 6 69 882 5 2 2000 207 8 69 860 5 0 1999 196 66 984 5 9 1998 193 2 67 569 5 3 1997 184 3 65 832 6 4 Current overview editAccording to ATB Financial s Vice President and Chief Economist Todd Hirsch who spoke during a April 2 2020 webinar hosted by the Calgary Chamber of Commerce the COVID 19 pandemic in Alberta and its economic fallout will permanently reshape our economy Hirsch said that he expects that the resulting contraction in Alberta s economy will be the worst Alberta has ever seen 30 The global price of oil decreased dramatically because of the combination of COVID 19 pandemic and the 2020 Russia Saudi Arabia oil price war In March 2020 the United States benchmark crude oil EWest Texas Intermediate WTI upon which Alberta s benchmark crude oil Western Canadian Select WCS price is based dropped to an historical below of US 20 a barrel 32 33 34 35 The price of WCS bitumen blend crude was US 3 82 per barrel by the end of March 36 In 2018 the low price of heavy oil negatively impacted Alberta s economic growth 37 38 In November 2018 the price of Western Canadian Select WCS the benchmark for Canadian heavy crude hit its record low of less than US 14 a barrel 39 as a surge of production met limited pipeline space causing bottlenecks 40 Previously from 2008 through 2018 WCS had sold at an average discount of US 17 against West Texas Intermediate WTI the U S crude oil benchmark but by the fall of 2018 the differential between WCS and WTI reached a record of over US 50 per barrel 38 In response then Premier Rachel Notley made a December 2 announcement of a mandatory cut of 8 7 in Alberta s oil production 40 By December 12 after the announcement of the government s mandated oil output curtailment the price of WCS rose c 70 to c US 41 a barrel with the WTI differential falling from US50 to c US 11 according to the Financial Post The WCS price rose to US 28 60 by January 2019 as the international price of oil had begun to recover from the December sharp downturn caused by the ongoing China U S trade war 41 In March 2019 the differential of WTI over WCS decreased to US9 94 as the price of WTI dropped to US 58 15 a barrel which is 7 5 lower than it was in March 2018 while the price of WCS increased to US 48 21 a barrel which is 35 7 higher than in March 2018 42 According to TD Economics September 2019 report the government s mandated oil output curtailment has resulted in a sustained rebound in WCS prices 37 However investment and spending were low in the province 37 The loss of 14 000 of the full time jobs out of 2 344 000 in Alberta in July 2019 represented the largest decline in employment in Canada for that month according to Statistics Canada 14 In 1985 Alberta s energy industry accounted for 36 1 of the provinces 66 8 billion GDP 43 3 In 2006 the mining oil and gas extraction industry accounted for 29 1 of GDP 11 3 by 2012 it was 23 3 44 in 2013 it was 24 6 of Alberta s 331 9 billion GDP 43 6 and in 2016 the mining oil and gas extraction industry accounted for about 27 9 of Alberta s GDP 11 3 By comparison In 2017 the federal provincial and territorial governments spent some 724 billion on programs and more than 58 billion on interest payments on their public debt which combined amounted to about 36 percent of Canada s gross domestic product GDP Their combined borrowing that year was 27 billion and their net financial debt at year end stood at around 1 2 trillion about 54 percent of GDP In his July 2019 CBC News article economist Trevor Tombe said that prior to the 2014 recession Albertans had experienced boom years from 2010 to 2014 with workers earnings reaching exceptional highs 22 The recession which ended over two years ago in 2017 was long and deep 22 By 2019 five years later the province was still in recovery Overall there were approximately 35 000 jobs lost in mining oil and gas alone 22 By 2019 the slow recovery and low earnings growth have resulted in workers getting fewer hours fewer jobs and in some cases lower wages 22 Tombe said that from 2014 to 2016 Alberta earned CDN 75 billion less per year with the total incomes of workers business and government combined falling by nearly 20 per cent Tombes said that relative to Alberta s growth path prior to the recession Alberta s economy is down 100 billion per year compared to what was anticipated 22 Tombes said that the boom years that ended in 2014 were the outliers and the lower earnings in 2019 reflect a natural adjustment that s moving Alberta to a more normal and balanced labour market 22 While earnings are lower because of inflation prices have increased in Alberta by 18 since 2011 22 The 1 183 per week a typical worker earns today goes about as far as 1 000 did nearly a decade ago according to Tombe 22 In spite of the typical worker in Alberta earns 1 183 per week compared to Saskatchewan where the typical worker earns 1 070 per week The weekly income a typical worker in all the other Canadian provinces and territories is less than that 22 Since 2014 sectors that offered high wage employment of 30 and above saw about 100 000 jobs disappear construction down more than 45 000 jobs mining oil and gas down nearly 35 000 and professional services down 18 000 22 Alberta s deficit editAlberta s net debt was 27 5 billion by March 2019 which represents the end of the 2018 19 fiscal year FY 45 70 46 By November 2018 Alberta s government expenditures were 55 billion while the revenue was about 48 billion according to a report by the University of Calgary s School of Public Policy SPP economist Trevor Tombe 47 4 Capital investment amounted to 4 3 billion 47 The provincial government employs more than 210 000 full time equivalent workers across hundreds of departments boards and other entities 47 Tombe cited a 8 3 billion deficit in his November report 47 5 prior to the release in February 2019 of the corrected deficit figures which was 1 9 billion less in 2018 19 than originally expected 6 9 billion deficit instead of the original 8 8 billion 38 Alberta s current deficit is unusual for the province says Tombe in 2018 47 7 During the financial crisis Alberta s net asset position equivalent to 15 per cent of GDP it owned more financial assets than it owed in debt 47 6 In 2009 Alberta had 31 7 billion in financial assets 45 70 Net government debt to GDP by province March 2019 47 6 BC Alberta Saskatchewan Manitoba Ontario Quebec New Brunswick Nova Scotia Prince Edward Island Newfoundland 15 5 8 7 15 4 34 2 37 6 43 40 34 2 33 47 3 Alberta s credit rating editOn December 3 2019 Moody s downgraded Alberta s credit rating from Aa2 stable from Aa1 negative and downgraded the long term debt ratings of the Alberta Capital Finance Authority and the long term issuer rating of ATB Financial to Aa2 from Aa1 48 The agency said that there is a structural weakness in the provincial economy that remains concentrated and dependent on non renewable resources and remains pressured by a lack of sufficient pipeline capacity to transport oil efficiently with no near term expectation of a significant rebound in oil related investments Alberta s oil and gas sector is carbon intensive and Alberta s greenhouse gas emissions are the highest among provinces Alberta is also susceptible to natural disasters including wildfires and floods which could lead to significant mitigation costs by the province 48 Alberta s real per capita GDP editIn 2006 Alberta s per capita GDP was higher than all US states and one of the highest figures in the world In 2006 the deviation from the national average was the largest for any province in Canadian history 6 In 2007 Alberta s per capita GDP in 2007 was C 74 825 approx US 75 000 by far the highest of any Canadian province 61 higher than the Canadian average of C 46 441 and more than twice that of all the Maritime provinces In 2017 Alberta s real per capita GDP the economic output per person was 71 092 compared to the Canadian average of 47 417 9 Alberta s A grade on its income per capita was based on the fact that it was almost identical to that of the top peer country in 2016 Ireland 10 In 2017 Alberta s real per capita GDP the economic output per person was 71 092 compared to the Canadian average output per person of 47 417 and Prince Edward Island at 32 123 per person 9 Since at least 1997 Alberta s per capita GDP has been higher than that of any other province In 2014 Alberta s reached its highest gap ever 30 069 between its real capita GDP and the Canadian average 9 According to the Conference Board of Canada in 2016 Alberta earned an A grade with income per capita almost identical to the top peer country Ireland 10 In 2016 income per capita in Alberta was 59 259 Alberta Income per capita 10 1981 1988 1991 1997 2000 2003 2005 2007 2009 2010 2014 2016 42 441 45 995 45 393 53 748 57 106 57 646 61 163 62 518 57 321 59 254 66 031 59 249Alberta s GDP compared to other provinces editA table listing annual Gross domestic product GDP at basic prices by industry provinces and territories x 1 000 000 from 2014 through 2018 with value chained to 2012 dollars 49 ProvinceorTerritory GDP millionCAD 2014 GDP millionCAD 2015 GDP millionCAD 2016 GDP millionCAD 2017 GDP millionCAD 2018 nbsp British Columbia 219 060 9 224 153 4 231 509 9 240 657 9 246 506 3 nbsp Alberta 338 262 6 326 476 7 313 241 5 327 596 2 335 095 6 nbsp Saskatchewan 80 175 7 79 574 2 79 364 4 81 179 0 82 502 7 nbsp Manitoba 58 276 3 59 082 5 60 066 2 61 941 2 62 723 1 nbsp Ontario 659 861 2 677 384 0 693 900 4 712 984 3 728 363 7 nbsp Quebec 338 319 0 341 688 0 346 713 7 356 677 9 365 614 4 nbsp New Brunswick 29 039 6 29 275 7 29 686 3 30 271 8 30 295 3 nbsp Prince Edward Island 5 205 6 5 280 7 5 372 2 5 553 3 5 700 0 nbsp Nova Scotia 34 747 2 35 013 4 35 549 3 36 075 4 36 518 2 nbsp Newfoundland and Labrador 31 143 3 30 806 0 31 334 5 31 610 6 30 757 9 nbsp Yukon 2 510 9 2 320 2 2 482 5 2 554 5 2 626 1 nbsp Northwest Territories 4 574 6 4 621 3 4 679 8 4 861 3 4 954 7 nbsp Nunavut 2 363 6 2 353 0 2 434 3 2 685 3 2 955 0 Source Statistics Canada GDP totals 49 Economic geography edit nbsp Alberta s location within Canada See also Geography of Alberta and List of regions of Alberta Alberta has a small internal market and it is relatively distant from major world markets despite good transportation links to the rest of Canada and to the United States to the south Alberta is located in the northwestern quadrant of North America in a region of low population density called the Interior Plains Alberta is landlocked and separated by a series of mountain ranges from the nearest outlets to the Pacific Ocean and by the Canadian Shield from ports on the Lakehead or Hudson Bay From these ports to major populations centres and markets in Europe or Asia is several thousands of kilometers The largest population clusters of North America the Boston Washington San Francisco San Diego Chicago Pittsburgh and Quebec City Windsor Corridors are all thousands of kilometers away from Alberta Partly for this reason Alberta has never developed a large presence in the industries that have traditionally started industrialization in other places notably the original Industrial Revolution in Great Britain but which require large labour forces and large internal markets or easy transportation to export markets namely textiles metallurgy or transportation related manufacturing automotives ships or train cars Agriculture has been a key industry since the 1870s The climate is dry temperate and continental with extreme variations between seasons Productive soils are found in most of the southern half of the province excluding the mountains and in certain parts of the north Agriculture on a large scale is practiced further north in Alberta than anywhere else in North America extending into the Peace River country above the 55th parallel north Generally however northern Alberta and areas along the Alberta Rockies is forested land and logging is more important than agriculture there Agriculture is divided into primarily field crops in the east livestock in the west and a mixture in between and in the parkland belt in the near north Conventional oil and gas fields are found throughout the province on an axis running from the northwest to the southeast Oil sands are found in the northeast especially around Fort McMurray the Athabasca Oil Sands Because of its relatively economically isolated location Alberta relies heavily on transportation links with the rest of the world Alberta s historical development has been largely influenced by the development of new transportation infrastructure see trends below Alberta is now served by two major transcontinental railways CN and CP by three major highway connections to the Pacific the Trans Canada via Kicking Horse Pass the Yellowhead via Yellowhead Pass and the Crowsnest via Crowsnest Pass and one to the United States Interstate 15 as well as two international airports Calgary and Edmonton Also Alberta is connected to the TransCanada pipeline system natural gas to Eastern Canada the Northern Border Pipeline gas Alliance Pipeline gas and Enbridge Pipeline System oil to the Eastern United States the Gas Transmission Northwest and Northwest Pipeline gas to the Western United States and the McNeill HVDC Back to back station electric power to Saskatchewan Economic regions and cities edit Since the days of early agricultural settlement the majority of Alberta s population has been concentrated in the parkland belt mixed forest grassland a boomerang shaped strip of land extending along the North Saskatchewan River from Lloydminster to Edmonton and then along the Rocky Mountain foothills south to Calgary This area is slightly more humid and treed than the drier prairie grassland region called Palliser s Triangle to its south and large areas of the south the Special Areas were depopulated during the droughts of the 1920s and 30s The chernozem black soil of the parkland region is more agriculturally productive than the red and grey soils to the south Urban development has also been most advanced in the parkland belt Edmonton and Red Deer are parkland cities while Calgary is on the parkland prairie fringe Lethbridge and Medicine Hat are prairie cities Grande Prairie lies in the Peace River Country a parkland region with isolated patches of prairie hence the name in the northwest isolated from the rest of the parkland by the forested Swan Hills Fort McMurray is the only urbanized population centre in the boreal forest which covers much of the northern half of the province Calgary and Edmonton edit The Calgary and Edmonton regions by far the province s two largest metropolitan regions account for the majority of the province s population They are relatively close to each other by the standards of Western Canada and distant from other metropolitan regions such as Vancouver or Winnipeg This has produced a history of political and economic rivalry and comparison but also economic integration that has created an urbanized corridor between the two cities The economic profile of the two regions is slightly different Both cities are mature service economies built on a base of resource extraction in their hinterlands However Calgary is predominant in hosting the regional and national headquarters of oil and gas exploration and drilling companies Edmonton skews much more towards governments universities and hospitals as large employers while Edmonton s suburban fringes e g Fort Saskatchewan Nisku Strathcona County Refinery Row Leduc Beaumont Acheson are home to most of the province s manufacturing much of it related to oil and gas 50 Calgary Edmonton Corridor edit The Calgary Edmonton Corridor is the most urbanized region in the province and one of the densest in Canada Measured from north to south the region covers a distance of roughly 400 kilometres 250 mi In 2001 the population of the Calgary Edmonton Corridor was 2 15 million 72 of Alberta s population 51 It is also one of the fastest growing regions in the country A 2003 study by TD Bank Financial Group found the corridor was the only Canadian urban centre to amass a U S level of wealth while maintaining a Canadian style quality of life offering universal health care benefits The study found GDP per capita in the corridor was 10 above average U S metropolitan areas and 40 above other Canadian cities at that time citation needed Calgary Edmonton rivalry edit See also Battle of Alberta Seeing Calgary and Edmonton as part of a single economic region as the TD study did in 2003 was novel The more traditional view had been to see the two cities as economic rivals For example in the 1980 both cities claimed to be the Oil Capital of Canada Background edit nbsp The Leduc No 1 well which blew in 1947 marked the beginning of series of petroleum related economic booms See also History of Alberta and History of the petroleum industry in Canada Alberta has always been an export oriented economy In line with Harold Innis Staples Thesis the economy has changed substantially as different export commodities have risen or fallen in importance In sequence the most important products have been fur wheat and beef and oil and gas The development of transportation in Alberta has been crucial to its historical economic development The North American fur trade relied on birch bark canoes York boats and Red River carts on buffalo trails to move furs out of and European trade goods into the region Immigration into the province was eased tremendously by the arrival of the Canadian Pacific Railway s transcontinental line in 1880s Commercial farming became viable in the area once the grain trade had developed technologies to handle the bulk export of grain especially hopper cars and grain elevators Oil and gas exports have been possible because of increasing pipeline technology Prior to the 1950s Alberta was a primarily agricultural economy based on the export of wheat beef and a few other commodities The health of economy was closely bound up with the price of wheat In 1947 a major oil field was discovered near Edmonton It was not the first petroleum find in Alberta but it was large enough to significantly alter the economy of the province and coincided with growing American demand for energy Since that time Alberta s economic fortunes have largely tracked the price of oil and increasingly natural gas prices When oil prices spiked during the 1967 Oil Embargo 1973 oil crisis and 1979 energy crisis Alberta s economy boomed However during the 1980s oil glut Alberta s economy suffered Alberta boomed once again during the 2003 2008 oil price spike In July 2008 the price of oil peaked and began to decline and Alberta s economy soon followed suit with unemployment doubling within a year By 2009 with natural gas prices at a long term low Alberta s economy was in poor health compared to before although still relatively better than many other comparable jurisdictions By 2012 natural gas prices were at a ten year low the Canadian dollar was high and oil prices recovered until June 2014 The spin offs from petroleum allowed Alberta to develop many other industries Oilpatch related manufacturing is an obvious example but financial services and government services have also benefited from oil money A comparison of the development of Alberta s less oil and gas endowed neighbours Saskatchewan and Manitoba reveals the role petroleum has played Alberta was once the smallest of the three Prairie Provinces by population in the early 20th century but by 2009 Alberta s population was 3 632 483 or approximately three times as much as either Saskatchewan 1 023 810 or Manitoba 1 213 815 Employment editAlberta s economy is a highly developed one in which most people work in services such as healthcare government or retail 52 Primary industries are also of great importance however By March 2016 the unemployment rate in Alberta rose to 7 9 53 its highest level since April 1995 and the first time the province s rate has surpassed the national average since December 1988 8 There were 21 200 fewer jobs than February 2015 53 The unemployment rate was expected to average 7 4 in 2016 54 13 The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers CAPP claimed that Alberta lost 35 000 jobs in 2015 25 000 from the oil services sector and 10 000 from exploration and production 55 Full time employment increased by 10 000 in February 2016 after falling 20 000 in both December 2015 and January 2016 The natural resources industry lost 7 400 jobs in February Year over year y y the goods sector lost 56 000 jobs while the services sector gained 34 800 53 In 2015 Alberta s population increased by 3 900 53 While Alberta had a reprieve in job loss in February 2016 up 1 400 jobs after losing jobs in October November December 2015 and January 2016 Ontario lost 11 200 jobs Saskatchewan lost 7 800 jobs and New Brunswick lost 5 700 jobs 53 The unemployment rate in spring 2019 in Alberta was 6 7 with 21 000 jobs added in April in Calgary it was 7 4 in Edmonton it was 6 9 in Northern Alberta it was 11 2 and in Southern Alberta it was 7 8 13 By July 2019 the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate had increased to 7 0 which represented an increase of 0 3 from the previous year 12 The unemployment rate in Alberta peaked in November 2016 at 9 1 Its lowest point in a ten year period from July 2009 to July 2019 was in September 2013 at 4 3 12 By August 2019 the employment number in Alberta was 2 344 000 following the loss of 14 000 full time jobs in July which represented that the largest decline in Canada according to Statistics Canada 14 Employment by industry Alberta seasonally adjusted 000s 56 Industries August 2019 July 2019 August 2018 All industries 2 344 3 2 343 7 2 340 2 Goods producing sector 589 6 595 6 602 1 Agriculture 49 9 50 7 48 5 Forestry fishing mining oil and gas 138 3 144 3 154 4 Utilities 24 5 24 1 23 7 Construction 241 9 242 1 246 5 Manufacturing 134 9 134 5 129 0 Services Producing Sector 1 754 8 1 748 1 1 738 1 Trade 339 3 340 0 337 1 Transportation and Warehousing 139 4 140 0 138 3 Finance Insurance Real Estate and Leasing 105 7 107 2 102 3 Professional Scientific and Technical Services 187 2 185 4 181 5 Business Building and Other Support Services 83 2 84 4 88 6 Educational Services 157 2 157 7 160 7 Health Care and Social Assistance 292 4 290 6 278 8 Information Culture and Recreation 79 0 74 3 78 7 Accommodation and Food Services 140 4 136 7 146 6 Other Services 115 1 118 2 116 7 Public Administration 116 0 113 6 108 8 Extraction industries edit According to the Government of Alberta the mining and oil and gas extraction industry accounted for 6 1 of total employment in Alberta in 2017 11 By April 2019 there were about 145 100 people working directly with the oil and gas industry 57 In 2013 there were 171 200 people employed in the mining and oil and gas extraction industry 44 In 2007 there were 146 900 people working in the mining and oil and gas extraction industry 58 Oil and Gas Extraction industry 69 900 Support Activities for Mining amp Oil amp Gas Extraction primarily oil and gas exploration and drilling 71 700 Mining other than oil and gas mainly coal and mineral mining amp quarrying 5 100 Largest employers of Alberta edit According to Alberta Venture magazine s list of the 50 largest employers in the province the largest employers are Rank 2012 59 Rank 2010 60 Rank 2007 61 Employer Industry 2019 Employees Total 2012 Employees Total 2010 Employees Total 2007 Employees Total Head office Description Notes 1 1 Alberta Health Services Healthcare 102 700 62 99 400 92 200 see note Edmonton Provincial public health authority Created in 2008 by merging nine separate provincial health authorities 2 2 4 Canada Safeway Limited Wholesale and Retail Trade 30 000 30 000 34 318 Calgary Food and drug retailer subsidiary of Sobeys Inc since 2014 before that subsidiary of American chain 3 6 n a Agrium Inc Agri business 15 200 2016 63 14 800 11 153 n a Calgary Wholesale producer distributor and retailer of agricultural products and services in North and South America n a not listed in 2007 4 7 8 University of Alberta Education 14 500 10 800 11 000 Edmonton Publicly funded accredited university 5 4 29 Canadian Pacific Railway Transportation 12 695 14 169 14 970 15 232 Calgary Railway and inter modal transportation services 6 5 31 Suncor Energy Petroleum Resource Industry 12 500 64 13 026 12 978 5 800 Calgary Petroleum extraction refining and retail Merged with Petro Canada in 2009 7 9 35 Shaw Communications Communications 12 500 10 000 8 985 Calgary Provider of digital telecommunications services cable television internet telephony and community television production facilities 8 8 15 Flint Energy Services Ltd Energy 11 211 10 280 6 169 Calgary Energy Construction 9 11 n a Stantec Inc Professional Services 11 100 9 300 n a Edmonton Architecture Engineering Construction n a not listed in 2007 10 12 9 Calgary Board of Education Public Education 14 000 9 106 9 278 10 972 Calgary Municipal K 12 Public Education School BoardSectors editOil and gas extraction industries edit nbsp Drilling rig in Alberta See also Petroleum production in Canada and Natural gas in Canada In 2018 Alberta s energy sector contributed over 71 5 billion to Canada s nominal gross domestic product 4 In 2006 it accounted for 29 1 of Alberta s GDP 11 3 by 2012 it was 23 3 44 in 2013 it was 24 6 43 6 and in 2016 it was 27 9 11 3 According to Statistics Canada in May 2018 the oil and gas extraction industry reached its highest proportion of Canada s national GDP since 1985 exceeding 7 and surpass ing banking and insurance 5 with extraction of non conventional oil from the oilsands reaching an impressive all time high in May 2018 5 With conventional oil extraction climbed up to the highs from 2007 the demand for Canadian oil was strong in May 5 Alberta is the largest producer of conventional crude oil synthetic crude natural gas and gas products in the country Alberta is the world s 2nd largest exporter of natural gas and the 4th largest producer 65 Two of the largest producers of petrochemicals in North America are located in central and north central Alberta In both Red Deer and Edmonton world class polyethylene and vinyl manufacturers produce products shipped all over the world and Edmonton s oil refineries provide the raw materials for a large petrochemical industry to the east of Edmonton Since the early 1940s Alberta had supplied oil and gas to the rest of Canada and the United States The Athabasca River region produces oil for internal and external use The Athabasca Oil Sands contain the largest proven reserves of oil in the world outside Saudi Arabia The Athabasca Oil Sands sometimes known as the Athabasca Tar sands have estimated unconventional oil reserves approximately equal to the conventional oil reserves of the rest of the world estimated to be 1 6 trillion barrels 250 10 9 m3 With the development of new extraction methods such as steam assisted gravity drainage SAGD which was developed in Alberta bitumen and synthetic crude oil can be produced at costs close to those of conventional crude Many companies employ both conventional strip mining and non conventional in situ methods to extract the bitumen from the oil sands With current technology and at current prices about 315 billion barrels 50 1 10 9 m3 of bitumen are recoverable Fort McMurray one of Canada s fastest growing cities has grown enormously in recent years because of the large corporations which have taken on the task of oil production As of late 2006 there were over 100 billion in oil sands projects under construction or in the planning stages in northeastern Alberta Another factor determining the viability of oil extraction from the oil sands was the price of oil The oil price increases since 2003 made it more than profitable to extract this oil which in the past would give little profit or even a loss Alberta s economy was negatively impacted by the 2015 2016 oil glut with a record high volume of worldwide oil inventories in storage 15 with global crude oil collapsing at near ten year low prices 16 17 18 The United States doubled its 2008 production levels mainly due to substantial improvements in shale fracking technology OPEC members consistently exceeded their production ceiling and China experienced a marked slowdown in economic growth and crude oil imports 16 17 18 66 67 Mining and Oil and Gas Extraction Industry 2017 68 Alberta Mining and Oil and Gas Extraction Industry Employment 2 286 900 140 300 Employment Share N A 6 1 Unemployment 194 700 8 800 Unemployment rate 7 8 5 9 Data Source Statistics Canada Labour Force Survey CANSIM Table 282 0008 2017 Employment share is obtained by dividing the number of employment in this industry by total employment in Alberta 68 Natural gas edit Natural gas has been found at several points and in 1999 the production of natural gas liquids ethane propane and butanes totalled 172 8 million barrels 27 47 10 6 m3 valued at 2 27 billion Alberta also provides 13 of all the natural gas used in the United States Notable gas reserves were discovered in the 1883 near Medicine Hat 69 70 The town of Medicine Hat began using gas for lighting the town and supplying light and fuel for the people and a number of industries using the gas for manufacturing One of North America s benchmarks is Alberta gas trading price the AECO C spot price 71 In 2018 69 of the marketable natural gas in Canada was produced in Alberta 72 Forty nine per cent of Alberta s natural gas production is consumed in Alberta 71 In Alberta the average household uses 135 gigajoules 38 000 kWh of natural gas annually 73 Domestic demand for natural gas is divided across sectors with the highest demand 83 coming from industrial electrical generation transportation and other sectors and 17 percent going towards residential and commercial sectors 71 Of the provinces Alberta is the largest consumer of natural gas at 3 9 billion cubic feet per day 74 By August 2019 the Financial Post said that AECO daily and monthly natural gas prices were at the lowest they have been since 1992 75 Canada s largest natural gas producer Canadian Natural Resources Ltd announced in early August that it had shut in gas production of 27 000 million cubic feet per day because of depressed prices 75 Previously natural gas pipeline drilled in the southern Alberta and shipped to markets in Eastern Canada By 2019 the entire natural gas industry had was primarily operating in northwestern Alberta and northeastern B C which resulted in strained infrastructure New systems will not be complete until 2021 or 2023 75 In September 25 2017 Alberta s benchmark AECO natural gas prices fell into negative territory meaning producers have had to pay customers to take their gas 76 It happened again in early October with the price per gigajoule dropping to 7 cents 76 TransCanada now TC Energy Corp which owns and operates Alberta s largest natural gas gathering and transmission system interrupted its pipeline service in the fall of 2017 to complete field maintenance on the Alberta system 76 In July 2018 RS Energy Group s energy analyst Samir Kayande said that faced with a glut of natural gas across North America the continental market price was 3 per gigajoule 77 Alberta is awash with natural gas but faces pipeline bottlenecks 77 CEOs of nine Alberta natural gas producers requested the Kenney government to mandate production cuts to deal with the crisis 77 On June 30 the AECO price of gas dropped to 11 cents per gigajoule because of maintenance issues with the pipeline giant TC Energy Corp 78 In 2003 Alberta produced 4 97 trillion cubic feet 141 10 9 m3 of marketable natural gas 79 That year 62 of Alberta s natural gas was shipped to the United States 24 was used within Alberta and 14 was used in the rest of Canada 79 In 2006 Alberta consumed 1 45 trillion cubic feet 41 10 9 m3 of natural gas The rest was exported across Canada and to the United States citation needed Royalties to Alberta from natural gas and its byproducts are larger than royalties from crude oil and bitumen citation needed In 2006 there were 13 473 successful natural gas wells drilled in Alberta 12 029 conventional gas wells and 1 444 coalbed methane wells citation needed There may be up to 500 trillion cubic feet 14 10 12 m3 of coalbed methane in Alberta although it is unknown how much of this gas might be recoverable citation needed Alberta has one of the most extensive natural gas systems in the world as part of its energy infrastructure with 39 000 kilometres 24 000 mi of energy related pipelines citation needed Coal edit nbsp Remains of the former Atlas Coal Mine near Drumheller now a National Historic Site of Canada See also Coal in Alberta Coal has been mined in Alberta since the late 19th century Over 1800 mines have operated in Alberta since then 70 The coal industry was vital to the early development of several communities especially those in the foothills and along deep river valleys where coal was close to the surface Alberta is still a major coal producer every two weeks Alberta produces enough coal to fill the Sky Dome in Toronto 70 Much of that coal is burned in Alberta for electricity generation By 2008 Alberta used over 25 million tonnes of coal annually to generate electricity 70 However Alberta is set to retire coal power by 2023 ahead of 2030 provincial deadline 80 Alberta has vast coal resources and 70 per cent of Canada s coal reserves are located in Alberta This amounts to 33 6 Gigatonnes 70 Vast beds of coal are found extending for hundreds of miles a short distance below the surface of the plains The coal belongs to the Cretaceous beds and while not so heavy as that of the Coal Measures in England is of excellent quality citation needed In the valley of the Bow River alongside the Canadian Pacific Railway valuable beds of anthracite coal are still worked The usual coal deposits of the area of bituminous or semi bituminous coal These are largely worked at Lethbridge in southern Alberta and Edmonton in the centre of the province Many other parts of the province have pits for private use Electricity edit See also Electricity policy of Alberta As of June 2016 update Alberta s generating capacity was 16 261 MW 81 and Alberta has about 26 000 kilometres 16 200 mi of transmission lines 82 Alberta has 1491 megawatts of wind power capacity 81 Production of electricity in Alberta in 2016 by source Generation GWh Share by Fuel Coal 42 227 50 2 Natural Gas 33 184 39 4 Hydro 1 773 2 1 Wind 4 408 5 2 Biomass 2 201 2 6 Others 338 0 4 Total 84 132 100 Alberta has added 9 000 MW of new supply since 1998 81 Peak for power use in one day was set on July 9 2015 10 520 MW 83 Mineral mining edit Building stones mined in Alberta include Rundle stone and Paskapoo sandstone Diamonds were first found in Alberta in 1958 and many stones have been found since although to date no large scale mines have been developed 70 Manufacturing edit The Edmonton area and in particular Nisku is a major centre for manufacturing oil and gas related equipment As well Edmonton s Refinery Row is home to a petrochemical industry According to a 2016 Statistics Canada report Alberta s manufacturing sales year over year sales fell 13 2 per cent with a loss of almost four per cent from December to January Alberta s economy continued to shrink because of the collapse of the oil and gas sector The petroleum and coal product manufacturing industry is now third behind food and chemicals 84 Biotechnology edit Several companies and services in the biotech sector are clustered around the University of Alberta for example ColdFX Food processing edit Owing to the strength of agriculture food processing was once a major part of the economies of Edmonton and Calgary but this sector has increasingly moved to smaller centres such as Brooks the home of XL Foods responsible for one third of Canada s beef processing in 2011 Transportation edit nbsp Headquarters of the airline WestJet in Calgary Edmonton is a major distribution centre for northern communities hence the nickname Gateway to the North Edmonton is one of CN Rail s most important hubs Since 1996 Canadian Pacific Railway has its headquarters in downtown Calgary WestJet Canada s second largest air carrier is headquartered in Calgary by Calgary International Airport which serves as the airline s primary hub 85 Prior to its dissolution Canadian Airlines was headquartered in Calgary by the airport 86 Prior to its dissolution Air Canada subsidiary Zip was headquartered in Calgary 87 Agriculture and forestry edit nbsp Grain elevator in southern Alberta Agriculture edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp See also Agriculture in Canada In the past cattle horses and sheep were reared in the southern prairie region on ranches or smaller holdings Currently Alberta produces cattle valued at over 3 3 billion as well as other livestock in lesser quantities In this region irrigation is widely used Wheat accounting for almost half of the 2 billion agricultural economy is supplemented by canola 88 barley rye sugar beets and other mixed farming In 2011 Alberta producers seeded an estimated total of 17 900 000 000 acres 7 2 billion hectares 28 000 000 square miles to spring wheat durum barley oats mixed grains triticale canola and dry peas Of the total seeded area 94 per cent was harvested as grains and oilseeds and six per cent as greenfeed and silage 89 Saudi Arabia is a major export target especially for wheat and processed potato products SA having decided to phase out their own forage and cereal production Alberta expects this to be an opportunity to fill livestock feed demand in the kingdom 90 Agriculture has a significant position in the province s economy Over three million cattle are residents of the province at one time or another 91 and Albertan beef has a healthy worldwide market Although beef could also be a major export to Saudi Arabia as with wheat and potatoes above market access is lacking at the moment 90 Nearly one half of all Canadian beef is produced in Alberta Alberta is one of the prime producers of plains buffalo bison for the consumer market Sheep for wool and lamb are also raised Wheat and canola are primary farm crops with Alberta leading the provinces in spring wheat production with other grains also prominent Much of the farming is dryland farming often with fallow seasons interspersed with cultivation Continuous cropping in which there is no fallow season is gradually becoming a more common mode of production because of increased profits and a reduction of soil erosion Across the province the once common grain elevator is slowly being lost as rail lines are decreased and farmers now truck the grain to central points Clubroot Plasmodiophora brassicae is a costly disease of Brassicaceae here including canola 88 In several experiments by Peng et al out of fungicides biofungicides inoculation with beneficial microbes cultivar resistance and crop rotation only genetic resistance combined with more than two years rotation worked susceptible cultivars rotated with other crops did not produce enough improvement 88 Alberta is the leading beekeeping province of Canada with some beekeepers wintering hives indoors in specially designed barns in southern Alberta then migrating north during the summer into the Peace River valley where the season is short but the working days are long for honeybees to produce honey from clover and fireweed Hybrid canola also requires bee pollination and some beekeepers service this need Forestry edit See also Pulp and paper industry in Canada and Alberta Forest Products Association The vast northern forest reserves of softwood allow Alberta to produce large quantities of lumber oriented strand board OSB and plywood and several plants in northern Alberta supply North America and the Pacific Rim nations with bleached wood pulp and newsprint In 1999 lumber products from Alberta were valued at 4 1 billion of which 72 were exported around the world Since forests cover approximately 59 of the province s land area the government allows about 23 3 million cubic metres 820 10 6 cu ft to be harvested annually from the forests on public lands Services edit Despite the high profile of the extractive industries Alberta has a mature economy and most people work in services In 2014 there were 1 635 8 thousand people employed in the services producing sector Since then the number has steadily increased to 1754 8 thousand jobs by August 2019 which is an increase of 16 7 thousand jobs from August 2018 92 This includes wholesale and retail trade transportation and warehousing finance insurance real estate rental and leasing professional scientific and technical services business building and other support services educational services health care and social assistance information culture and recreation accommodation and food services other services except public administration and public administration 92 Finance edit The TSX Venture Exchange is headquartered in Calgary The city has the second highest number of corporate head offices in Canada after Toronto and the financial services industry in Calgary has developed to support them All major banks including the Big Five maintain corporate offices in Calgary along with smaller banks such as Equitable Group Recently there has also been a number of fintech companies founded in Calgary such as the National Digital Asset Exchange and Neo Financial founded by the Skip the Dishes team 93 94 One of Canada s largest accounting firms MNP LLP is also headquartered in Calgary 95 Edmonton hosts the headquarters of the only major Canadian banks west of Toronto Canadian Western Bank and ATB Financial as well as the only province wide credit union Servus Credit Union Government edit Despite Alberta s reputation as a small government province many health care and education professionals are lured to Alberta from other provinces by the higher wages the Alberta government is able to offer because of oil revenues In 2014 the median household income in Alberta was 100 000 with the average weekly wage at 1 163 23 per cent higher than the Canadian national average 96 In their May 2018 report co authored by C D Howe Institute s President and CEO William B P Robson evaluating the budgets estimates and public accounts of 2017 18 fiscal year that were tabled by senior governments in the Canadian provinces and the federal government in terms of reporting financial information appropriately with transparency and in a timely fashion Alberta and New Brunswick ranked highest 97 1 The report also said that prior to 2016 Alberta had scored poorly in comparison with other provinces because of confusing array of operating saving and capital accounts that were not Public Sector Accounting Standards PSAS consistent 97 12 but since 2016 Alberta has received A plus grades 97 12 The report said that Alberta and New Brunswick in FY2017 provided straightforward reconciliations of results with budget intentions their auditors record no reservations and their budgets and public accounts are timely 97 12 Technology edit Alberta has a burgeoning high tech sector including prominent technology companies iStockPhoto Shareworks Benevity and Attabotics in Calgary and Bioware and AltaML in Edmonton 98 Growth in Calgary s technology sector particularly at Benevity fueled predictions of a modest economic recovery in February 2020 99 See also editEconomy of Canada Economy of Lethbridge Canadian Oil Patch for the petroleum industry History of the 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November 5 2007 a b Employment by industry monthly seasonally adjusted x 1 000 Statistics Canada June 27 2018 Retrieved September 26 2019 Neo Financial Stephenson Amanda Calgary companies breaking ground in hot fintech sector Calgary Herald Head Office MNP LLP Retrieved March 12 2022 Johnson Tracy March 5 2015 Alberta wages almost 25 higher than Canadian average Economists politicians and business leaders seek ways to bring wages down CBC Retrieved March 16 2016 a b c d Robson William B P Omran Farah May 1 2018 The Numbers Game Rating the Fiscal Accountability of Canada s Senior Governments PDF Report commentary Toronto Ontario C D Howe Institute p 24 ISBN 978 1 987983 66 1 ISSN 1703 0765 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Legge Adam January 13 2020 Opinion To stimulate innovation and growth in Alberta we need the A Prize Calgary Herald Retrieved February 15 2020 Varcoe Chris December 20 2019 Varcoe It s a little bit of a comeback story as modest economic recovery expected in 2020 Calgary Herald Retrieved February 15 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Economy of Alberta CBC Digital Archives Striking Oil in Alberta Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Economy of Alberta amp oldid 1218912751, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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