logo
Levy charged to Alberta oil companies too low to cover orphan well costs: report

Levy charged to Alberta oil companies too low to cover orphan well costs: report

CTV News27-05-2025

A new report is warning the annual levy charged to Alberta oil companies to fund the cleanup of orphaned oil and gas wells remains too low to keep up with the rate of surrendering.
The report, written by former University of Calgary Public Interest Law Clinic lawyer Drew Yewchuk, says this year's levy rate combined with low rates in previous years is leading to an estimated funding shortfall of $1.2 billion.
The levy funds the Orphan Well Association, a non-profit entity overseen by industry and regulator officials and tasked with reclaiming wells that are orphaned when oil and gas companies go bankrupt.
The association says it currently has more than 3,700 wells on its books that need to be decommissioned and reclaimed, which could cost more than $860 million.
Yewchuk's report says the $144 million in levies the Alberta Energy Regulator recently approved to be collected this fiscal year continues the trend of underfunding for the Orphan Well Association.
Since the association will also need to repay more than $300 million in federal and provincial government loans over the next 10 years, Yewchuk says Alberta's orphan well situation will only get further out of hand.
A spokesperson for the energy regulator says it hasn't seen the report and was unable to comment on it.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 27, 2025.
Jack Farrell, The Canadian Press

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

White hats, naked protestors and sweaty leaders in the gym: Headlines from the 2002 G8 summit in Kananaskis
White hats, naked protestors and sweaty leaders in the gym: Headlines from the 2002 G8 summit in Kananaskis

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

White hats, naked protestors and sweaty leaders in the gym: Headlines from the 2002 G8 summit in Kananaskis

Social Sharing As Alberta gears up to host leaders from some of the world's most powerful nations at the upcoming G7 summit, we're looking back at the most newsworthy headlines from the last time the high-profile event was held in Kananaskis, 23 years ago. Former prime minister Jean Chrétien met with world leaders at the 2002 G8 summit, when the group still included Russia. The leaders met to discuss a variety of topics, including the central agenda item of African aid, while also squeezing in beers, golf and souvenir shopping. Despite the recent Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the U.S. looming over the event, and the recent memory of out-of-control protests at the summit in Italy a year prior, Canada managed to deliver a safe and secluded event in the mountains, said John Kirton, director of the G7 research group at the University of Toronto. The move away from metropolitan host cities marked a return to what the meeting between the leading industrial nations was originally intended to be: a "fireside chat" between world leaders. "At the worst possible times, when the United States was really at its most vulnerable… Jean Chrétien and Canada's Kananaskis summit delivered," said Kirton. "Yes for security, yes against terrorism, but [also] for Africa and the Global South, and for Canadians and its economic agenda and in advancing the Canadian concern for protecting the world's natural environment all at the same time, and [Canada] proved it could all be done in complete peace." Kirton described it as "a mark for subsequent summits to meet." Calgary white hats world leaders Upon arrival in Calgary, then-mayor Dave Bronconnier greeted the world leaders with a white Smithbilt hat, a tradition symbolizing the city's hospitality. U.S. President George W. Bush donned his cowboy hat for a quick moment and then held it to his heart. The Ottawa Citizen reported him saying to Bronconnier, "You don't look old enough to be a mayor." According to the Globe and Mail 's reporting, French President Jacques Chirac refused to put on his hat. Russian President Vladimir Putin also shied away from modelling his gift, but did show curiosity, inspecting it closer. The Globe and Mail also reported few leaders did the ceremonial "yahoo" cheer after receiving their white hat. All eyes on Canada A Calgary Herald story from April 24, 2002 teed up how the G8 summit looked to change the world's perception of Canada with a "high-tech" showcase of non-stereotypical Canadiana in the form of a CD-ROM to be given to international delegates and journalists. "Before they arrive, they'll be thinking of beavers, igloos, red-coated police on horseback and toothless hockey goons," wrote Kerry Williamson of the Herald. "When they leave, they'll be reading Mordecai Richler and Will Ferguson, admiring Robert Bateman's paintings, talking of teepees and listening to David Foster's music." Besides the nation's ambitions for recrafting its image to the world, the very presence of the U.S. president at the summit conveyed a sign of trust in Canada, said Kirton, as there were doubts about whether Bush would make the trip after the events of 9/11. At the Delta Lodge in Kananaskis, chef Jeff O'Neill served up a regional cuisine with food that was "uniquely Canadian," he told the Calgary Herald. "He says it is safest to stay true to what he's best at and he is making sure to steer clear of anything like Borscht for Russian dignitaries," wrote the paper's Maureen DePatie. Later, the Herald confirmed leaders and delegates dined on smoked Bow River trout, Yukon Gold potato and charbroiled High Plains buffalo tenderloin during their stay. Clashing agendas, busy leaders During the two-day summit, leaders stayed busy with a packed agenda tackling issues of nuclear disarmament, the Middle East, terrorism and, most centrally, African aid. With al-Qaeda and other terror threats top of mind, Bush insisted that security be a more prominent subject on the docket, while Chrétien was committed to the agenda that was set at the last summit in Italy, which centred African issues. "Mr. Chrétien said yesterday that he would not let the Middle East discussion sideline his plan for a full-day discussion on Africa tomorrow," the Globe and Mail reported at the time. Bush and Putin had some similar interests according to their profiles in the Ottawa Citizen. Russia seemed in agreement with the U.S. to push for discussions on terrorism in Kananaskis. Four African leaders – Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria, Abdoulaye Wade of Senegal and Abdelaziz Bouteflika of Algeria — as well as UN Secretary General Kofi Annan joined the G8 heads, participating in a joint meeting on the Africa Action Plan. The leaders would eventually sign what Chrétien called a "landmark document for Africa," focused on reducing African nations' debt, helping to end regional wars, opening western markets and supporting education. The leaders' launch of the Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction was another major takeaway from the summit. The partnership made a $20 billion US commitment to dismantle aging nuclear weapons in Russia and other countries of the former Soviet Union. WATCH | CBC News coverage of the 2002 G8 Summit: 2002 G8 Summit devises 'landmark document for Africa' 23 years ago Duration 8:33 "Vladimir Putin agreed to let inspectors from his old Cold War rivals – the other G7 countries – enter Russia's most secret nuclear facilities, chemical weapons, biological, radiological ones, to inspect them to see what was there and then to dismantle them so they could not be used," said Kirton. Squeezing many discussions into the two-day summit, Chrétien explained to reporters how busy the leaders were keeping. "You all watch me having a beer with [Jacques] Chirac in front of the hotel for 10 minutes," Chrétien told reporters. "And I didn't have the time to finish the beer." World leaders after hours While leaders were mostly occupied with business during their short foray into K-country, news stories show their agenda wasn't all business. The Calgary Herald reported Chrétien snuck in four holes of golf just hours before the first official G8 meeting got underway. The word was he hit a birdie on the par-4 third hole, wrote Williamson. Chirac was reportedly drawn to buying several souvenir Canada t-shirts, and "in one store purchased a child's sweater with a moose embroidered on the front – worth $23 – and a Kananaskis golf cap." Putin also left with a piece of Canada: a large $150 dreamcatcher made near Vancouver. Bush and U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair "shared 20 sweaty minutes at the gym in what aides dubbed the first ever 'aerobic bilat,'" wrote Reuters. After walking in on Blair's workout, Bush remarked on his "impressive regime." Blair said Bush "looked in pretty good shape" himself. Naked protests and muddy demonstrations While world leaders received white hats on the eve of the summit, earlier that same morning, protestors were baring it all outside a Gap store on Stephen Avenue to protest the company's exploitation of workers. The 2002 G8 summit ushered in a more peaceful protesting format, said Kirton. The previous summit in Italy was marked by clashes between police and protestors that resulted in a demonstrator being shot and killed by police. Designated protest areas in Calgary contained much of the demonstrations, which included anti-globalization protests in the form of more traditional marches, as well as the more unique mud dance and knit-in demonstrations. "Defence in depth," is how Kirton remembered it. "Yes, you did have to have heavy police, right? They looked like imperial stormtroopers… with their masks and their clubs and their shields. But they were kept hidden inside nearby buildings," he said. WATCH | Protests at the 2002 G8 summit: Protesters at the Kananaskis G8 23 years ago Duration 17:14 "On the front lines, they put local Calgary police officers. They were on bikes… not in tanks or police cars." Ultimately, Kirton said, the relatively peaceful 2002 G8 in Kananaskis "certainly put Canada on the world stage, in a way – more centrally, more prominently – than it had ever done before."

10 AI Stocks I'd Buy Without Hesitation
10 AI Stocks I'd Buy Without Hesitation

Globe and Mail

timean hour ago

  • Globe and Mail

10 AI Stocks I'd Buy Without Hesitation

Artificial intelligence (AI) has reached an inflection point where early leaders are separating from the pack, creating exceptional investment opportunities across the AI value chain. From semiconductor giants to software innovators, the winners in this space offer compelling multiyear growth stories as AI transforms from experimental technology to business necessity. Smart positioning in quality AI stocks today could deliver strong returns as this technology reshapes every industry over the next decade. The AI revolution is accelerating beyond even optimistic forecasts. Companies successfully harnessing AI are seeing dramatic improvements in productivity and customer outcomes, while those ignoring it risk obsolescence. The total addressable market reaches into the trillions, yet adoption remains early. This creates a rare window for investors to position themselves before the masses recognize AI's full potential. I've analyzed dozens of AI-related companies to identify those with sustainable competitive advantages and clear monetization paths. These 10 stocks offer diversified exposure across infrastructure, software, and applications. Each brings unique strengths to the AI ecosystem, and I'd confidently buy any at current level for long-term holdings. 1. AI chip dominance Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) controls between 70% to 90% of the data center graphics processing unit (GPU) market, making its GPUs the industry standard for training large language models. The investment case rests on CUDA's decade-long ecosystem advantage, creating high switching costs. In Q1 of fiscal 2026, Nvidia reported record revenue of $44.1 billion, with data center revenue reaching $39.1 billion, a 73% increase year over year. Despite a $4.5 billion charge related to unsellable H20 GPUs due to U.S. export restrictions to China, Nvidia's dominance in AI infrastructure remains unchallenged. 2. Extreme ultraviolet monopoly ASML Holding (NASDAQ: ASML) manufactures the only extreme ultraviolet lithography machines capable of producing cutting-edge semiconductors, giving it the lion's share of the market for this critical technology. The company's substantial backlog provides multiyear revenue visibility, while research and development spending of around 4.3 billion euros annually maintains its technological moat. As AI drives demand for more advanced chips, ASML benefits, regardless of which chipmaker wins, making it a defensive play on AI infrastructure growth. 3. Enterprise AI transformation Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) monetizes AI through proven channels, with Copilot subscriptions already generating billions in annualized revenue just months after launch. The company's advantage lies in distribution: 1.5 billion Office users worldwide and a dominant Azure cloud position enable rapid AI deployment at scale. Microsoft's track record of successfully monetizing new technologies through existing customer relationships reduces execution risk, while AI integration across all products drives pricing power. 4. AI-powered insurance disruptor Lemonade (NYSE: LMND) uses AI throughout insurance operations to slash costs and improve customer experience, with 70% of claims processed instantly without human intervention. The company's loss ratios have improved dramatically as its algorithms learn from expanding data sets, while operational expenses remain a fraction of traditional insurers. As Lemonade scales into auto insurance and other verticals, its AI-first approach creates structural advantages that legacy carriers cannot replicate without rebuilding from scratch. 5. Conversational AI pioneer SoundHound AI (NASDAQ: SOUN) provides voice AI technology to major automotive and restaurant brands, with revenue growing over 80% annually and gross margins expanding toward software-industry standards. The company's edge-computing approach processes voice on-device, addressing privacy concerns while reducing latency. Recent customer wins include multiple top 10 automakers and expanding restaurant chains, validating the technology as voice interfaces become standard across industries. 6. AI-powered data analytics Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR) leverages two decades of classified government work to build AI platforms now driving over 70% annual commercial revenue growth. The company's Artificial Intelligence Platform (AIP) enables enterprises to deploy large language models on private data, addressing the security concerns limiting corporate AI adoption. With government contracts providing a stable base of revenue and commercial acceleration, Palantir offers both growth and stability in the emerging AI landscape. 7. AI data center infrastructure Applied Digital (NASDAQ: APLD) operates purpose-built data centers for high-performance computing, with facilities designed specifically for AI workload requirements, including advanced cooling and power density. The company has secured long-term contracts with Tier-1 customers for its entire 400MW capacity, providing predictable revenue growth. As AI compute demand outstrips supply, Applied Digital's specialized facilities command premium pricing, while its 2GW-plus development pipeline positions it for sustained growth. 8. Clean energy for AI Oklo (NYSE: OKLO) develops small modular reactors addressing AI data centers' massive energy requirements, with each reactor designed to provide 15MW to 50MW of clean baseload power. Recent regulatory streamlining and partnerships with data center operators validate the business model as tech companies seek carbon-free energy sources. The company's recycled fuel approach and compact design offer economic advantages over traditional nuclear energy, positioning it to benefit from AI's growing energy demands. 9. AI cloud infrastructure leader CoreWeave (NASDAQ: CRWV) specializes in GPU-accelerated cloud computing, offering AI-optimized infrastructure that major AI companies use for training and inference. The company is projected to generate $5 billion in revenue for 2025, with analysts expecting revenue to more than double to $11.6 billion in 2026 -- a 130% growth rate that validates its AI-first strategy. With established relationships serving leading AI labs and better GPU availability than most hyperscalers, CoreWeave has carved out a defensible niche in the fast-growing AI infrastructure market. 10. AI analytics specialist (NYSE: BBAI) applies AI to defense and commercial analytics, with expertise in computer vision and predictive modeling for mission-critical applications. The company reported Q1 2025 revenue of $34.8 million with 5% year-over-year growth and maintains a $385 million backlog, providing long-term revenue visibility. Recent contract wins in supply chain optimization and defense analytics demonstrate the value of specialized AI applications in regulated industries where accuracy and explainability matter most. Building an AI-powered portfolio These 10 stocks represent different layers of the AI ecosystem, from essential infrastructure to specialized applications. While AI investments are inherently volatile, each company demonstrates strong fundamentals, defensible market positions, and clear paths to sustainable growth. The convergence of technological capability, enterprise adoption, and massive addressable markets creates a compelling long-term opportunity for patient investors. Should you invest $1,000 in Nvidia right now? Before you buy stock in Nvidia, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Nvidia wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $656,825!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $865,550!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor 's total average return is994% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to172%for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 2, 2025 George Budwell has positions in Lemonade, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Palantir Technologies. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends ASML, Lemonade, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Palantir Technologies. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store