小蓝视频

Skip to content

Canada's oil and gas industry received $29.6B in subsidies in 2024, report finds

The subsidies dwarf the previous years total and come as Ottawa said it would wind down direct financial support for the industry
pipeline
With $21 billion in federal financing in 2024, the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project was counted in the report as the single biggest direct government subsidy to the oil and gas industry last year. | Kinder Morgan

The Canadian government provided $29.6 billion in direct subsidies to the oil and gas industry in 2024, a new report has found. 

The dollar amount, calculated in an annual tally by the group Environmental Defence, includes $21 billion in financing for the Trans Mountain pipeline.

Another $7.5 billion in public financing flowed through Export Development Canada, a Crown corporation that acts as an export credit agency to help Canadian companies grow internationally.

Environmental Defence claims the nearly $30 billion provided to the fossil fuel industry last year could have paid for building out Canada's interprovincial electricity grids — with more than $5 billion left to spare. 

小蓝视频ing Canada’s electric grid is seen as a major opportunity to re-enforce the country’s supply of clean electricity amid soaring demand and increasingly frequent extreme weather made worse by climate change. 

The 2024 subsidies dwarf the  in direct financing the Environmental Defence fund was provided to the oil and gas sector in 2023. 

The group claims that over the past five years, financial support to the industry has climbed to $74.6 billion. 

In July 2023, then-environment minister Steven Guilbeault said Ottawa would announce a plan to phase-out the  by the fall of 2024.

Ottawa's appetite to support the country's businesses appears to have grown since U.S. President Donald Trump took office, threatening Canada's export economy and sovereignty. 

Environment and Climate Change Canada did not immediately respond to questions over its plan to phase out inefficient fossil fuel subsidies.

In a statement, Environmental Defence associate director Julia Levin said oil and gas companies are using economic uncertainty brought on by U.S. tariffs to push governments to provide more subsidies to the industry. 

“Canadians should be very wary of calls for new pipelines: it’s taxpayers who end up paying the price for new fossil fuel infrastructure as foreign-owned companies and wealthy shareholders reap the rewards,” Levin said. 

Earlier this week, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said his party would commit to all five requests made by the oil and gas industry to expand their footprint in response to U.S. tariffs.

The five-point plan signed by oil, gas and pipeline executives included declaring an “energy crisis” and using emergency powers to speed up development of key projects in the “national interest.”

The CEOs also called on Ottawa to eliminate the federal government’s cap on emissions; reassess the West Coast limit on oil tankers; and perhaps most significantly, repeal the carbon levy on large industrial emitters.  

“We need to get out from under America’s thumb and start building the infrastructure that is essential to sell our natural resources to new markets, bring home jobs and dollars, and make us sovereign and self-reliant to stand up to Trump from a position of strength,” said Poilievre. 

“Canada’s energy sector, the experts on energy growth, have told us what we need to do. Today I am committing to meeting all of their urgent recommendations.” 

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks