“Today, Prime Minister Mark Carney and I made significant progress towards reaching an agreement on a West Coast pipeline and carbon pricing,” Smith said in a May 8 statement on X.
Smith said work still needed to be done to “get to the finish line” but she is now “much more confident this will be completed well before Alberta’s west coast pipeline submission to the Major Projects Office next month.”
A memorandum of understanding to be signed between the two governments outlines the conditions to be met before a new pipeline to the West Coast of British Columbia can be approved. The original deadline to complete the MOU was April 1, but that deadline has since been moved to July 1.
Prior to her meeting with Carney in Ottawa, Smith said Albertans were becoming “a little impatient” with slow progress on the pipeline, and she hoped the two sides would move forward with the agreement “in the next number of days.”
Carney said last week that a new pipeline was now “more probable than possible,” citing the war in Iran as a factor, which has pushed oil prices toward US$100 a barrel and damaged key energy infrastructure.
Speaking at the Canada Strong and Free Conference in Ottawa later in the day, Smith said the meeting with Carney left her “much more confident” that the memorandum could be signed soon.
Smith said pipeline talks would have been different if the federal Conservatives had won the last election, but that “there’s a compromise we have to make” to reach a deal.
“We have a Liberal government where their carbon tax objectives are a much higher priority,” Smith said.
Smith told reporters at the conference that the industrial carbon pricing had been a “big issue” and she hoped to have “something more firm to announce here very soon.” She said Ottawa’s proposal of $170 per tonne by 2030 had been “completely unachievable” and would have resulted in oil and gas production caps.
The Alberta premier also said there won’t be a private sector proponent for the pipeline until there is “some certainty” that the pipeline will get built.
“So don’t be surprised that there isn’t somebody coming forward yet on the submission,“ she said. ”But in order to get it built, there will have to be a private sector proponent who will build it, or a consortium of them.”
“Yes, carbon prices will make us [pay a] slightly higher cost than than other jurisdictions, but we’re trying to land the price at a level where it’s not going to make an enormous difference in those investment decisions,” Smith said.







