Once upon a time PetroCanada belonged to all Canadians as a state-owned energy firm |
Question looms after Harper's
sell-out of Canadian interests with CNOOC, Petronas takeovers.
Tuesday December 11, 2012
"To
be blunt, Canadians have not spent years reducing the ownership of sectors of
the economy by our own governments, only to see them bought and controlled by
foreign governments instead."
- Prime Minister
Stephen Harper, Dec. 7, 2012
There
are many good reasons that the Conservative government should have rejected the
$15 billion takeover of Canada's Nexen
oil and gas giant by the China National
Offshore Oil Corporation instead of accepting it last Friday.
Refusing
to sell out ownership of our natural resources to a foreign company, for
example, or rejecting China's appalling human rights record and undemocratic
rule by dictatorship or just because the benefits to Canada are not sufficient.
But
for Harper to allow the deal to go ahead while bitterly complaining that it
won't happen again because CNOOC is "state-owned" is not a good
reason -- it is an indication of his libertarian free-market at all costs
ideology.
And
not surprisingly, it's a dogmatic view Harper shares with the right-wing Fraser
Institute, which argues
that private ownership is "more productive" than public ownership
despite evidence to the contrary.
Harper's
words also applied to a second deal his government allowed, the $6 billion
takeover of Calgary-based natural gas company Progress Energy by
Malaysia's state-owned Petronas.
And
the prime minister's objections aren't based on the fact that CNOOC is
controlled by a Communist -- in name only -- regime. No, just that it is owned
by a government instead of shareholders.
"The
government's concern and discomfort for some time has been that very quickly, a
series of large-scale controlling transactions by foreign state-owned companies
could rapidly transform this (oil sands) industry from one that is essentially
a free market to one that is effectively under control of a foreign
government," Harper said.
Once
upon a time Canada also had a state-owned energy company -- PetroCanada -- that
allowed the country to have a significant window on the oil and gas industry
from top to bottom, from oil exploration to gas stations.
What's
more, five of the top 10 most profitable
companies in the world are big oil and gas firms.
So
what's wrong with taxpayers having a little skin in that game and some profits
to reduce taxation levels?
Perfectly
normal
For
any nation to have a state-owned energy firm isn't strange or restricted to
unelected regimes. Norway,Venezuela,
Mexico and Brazil are among dozens of nations with publicly-owned oil
businesses, which collectively control more than 75 per cent
of world crude oil production.
In
fact, Canada and the United States are the only major oil-producing countries
without publicly-owned energy firms.
And
strong arguments can be made in favour of national oil companies. A recent article
in Forbes business magazine -- hardly a socialist hotbed -- says there are many
reasons why NOCs can be beneficial.
"Leading
NOCs not only channel capital, technological and operational know-how into the
country, they also serve as custodians of their nation's wealth," writes
José de Sá of Bain & Company.
"Ideally,
they help insulate the socioeconomic development strategy from pulls and
pressures, and they guard its integrity as the country moves through economic
cycles. Most important, they maintain a steady course in the quest for global
competitiveness," he wrote this year.
Ideological
blinders
But
what is strange is that PetroCanada began to be privatized by a Conservative
government and the Liberal government that followed finished it off.
Apparently
there's a lot wrong with public ownership of natural resources -- if you are
ideologically motivated to oppose it.
That
may explain why the two parties that have alternated in governing Canada for
more than the past century both wanted to get rid of PetroCanada.
And
their lack of commitment to Canadian ownership of our own natural resources is
why both Harper and the Liberal Party's heir-apparent leader Justin Trudeau
both approved of the CNOOC and takeover.
So while
the rest of the world reaps the rewards of public ownership of natural
resources, Canada has not only gone in the opposite direction, it's also
allowing foreign companies to take over what is rightfully ours. Brilliant.
.
1 comment:
Because the federal Liberals stupidly put in the National Energy Program which ended up being a disaster and also PetroCanada which is nothing now like its former self.
The government has no business being in the petroleum retail industry.
Mexico has Pemex, but Europe has a number of private corporations such as Fina and Shell.
Common sense in national energy companies? Get real.
China in case you forgotten is communist and has alot of state owned companies.
Skeena Cellulose anyone? No? BC Steamships? How about Railwest?
"Socialism if nessesary, but not nessesarily socialism".
Wanna bet that BC Ferries goes back to being a Crown Corporation the way it was? The quasi-private model didn't work obviously, but as much as I would like to see BC Ferries go back to a Crown Corporation, I do not want to see NDP hacks appointed to the board, esp. those who don't even know what a springline is or where port quarter is aboard a ship.
Let's not go nuts in having the NDP buy off and set off new Corporations or state owned companies. Some work for essential things such as BC Hydro, and BC Ferries, but government should not be in the sports stadium business nor in many other industries. Keep the LDB though. Need a bit of control on how and where the sauce is delivered.
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