The Alberta government is set to provide its first detailed look at a proposed one-million-barrel-perday oil pipeline to Canada’s West Coast, with Premier Danielle Smith expected to make the announcement later today.
The project stems from a memorandum of understanding signed with Prime Minister Mark Carney last autumn, in which both governments agreed to work together on creating a new export route for Alberta’s bitumen to the Pacific Coast.
The proposed pipeline is also linked to a large-scale carbon capture initiative involving Alberta’s biggest oil producers. The province sees the two projects as part of a broader strategy to increase export capacity while supporting lower-emission energy production.
Today’s announcement comes at a politically sensitive moment. Alberta is preparing to hold a referendum this autumn on whether the province should separate from Canada, making the future relationship between Edmonton and Ottawa a central issue.
Smith has repeatedly argued that the pipeline agreement shows governments can still work together on projects that benefit both Alberta and the country as a whole. In her view, the initiative demonstrates that meaningful cooperation with the federal government remains possible.
Not everyone shares that perspective. Advocates of Alberta’s separation movement say the proposed pipeline does little to resolve what they consider to be years of unresolved tensions between the province and Ottawa.
More details on the project’s scope, timeline and next steps are expected to be released as part of the government’s announcement.




