The Financial Post reports in its Tuesday edition that oil sands producers, along with the Alberta and federal governments, are in talks before an April 1 deadline for a deal linking a carbon capture proposal to increased crude production and a new pipeline. The Post's Meghan Potkins writes that Kendall Dilling, head of the newly rebranded Oil Sands Alliance, formerly known as Pathways Alliance, said: "You've got three parties working really hard, meeting multiple times a week, all determined to get to 'yes.' There's lots of big challenges. ... There's still a lot to do. Whatever is or isn't announced on April 1, there's months of detailed work ahead. April 1 is another milestone, as opposed to some definitive end point." Alberta's new memorandum of understanding with Ottawa emphasizes that emissions-saving projects, like the Pathways carbon capture hub, are essential for the proposed West Coast pipeline. The deal could form the linchpin of Premier Danielle Smith's self-described "grand bargain," which links investment in emissions reductions to expanded oil sands production and access to new markets through a new one-million-barrel-per-day bitumen pipeline across British Columbia to the Pacific coast.
© 2026 Canjex Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.