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Wyoming and Texas lead 15 petroleum producing states and provinces for investment attractiveness; Saskatchewan highest ranked Canadian province at 6th while Alberta ranks 12th

Canada-US Energy Sector Competitiveness Survey 2022

This report presents the results of the Fraser Institute’s 2022 Canada-US Energy Sector Competitiveness Survey regarding barriers to investment in oil and gas exploration and production facilities in each country. The survey responses have been tallied to rank Canadian and American jurisdictions according to the extent of such barriers. Those barriers, as assessed by the survey respondents, include high tax rates, costly regulatory obligations, uncertainty over environmental regulations, and the interpretation and administration of regulations governing the “upstream” petroleum industry, as well as concerns over political stability and security of personnel and equipment.

This year’s survey of senior executives in the upstream oil and gas sector is consistent with the methodology used in previous editions of the Global Petroleum Survey and the Canada-US Energy Sector Competitiveness Survey. A total of 82 respondents participated in the survey this year, providing sufficient data to evaluate three Canadian provinces and 12 American states.

Jurisdictions evaluated are assigned scores on each of 16 questions pertaining to factors known to affect investment decisions. These scores are then used to generate a “Policy Perception Index” for each jurisdiction that reflects the perceived extent of the barriers to investment.

According to this year’s survey, Wyoming is the most attractive jurisdiction for oil and gas investment followed by Texas (2nd) and Oklahoma (3rd). Six other US jurisdictions also ranked in the top 10 this year: Kansas (4th), North Dakota (5th), Montana (7th), Mississippi (8th), US Offshore—Gulf of Mexico (9th) and Louisiana (10th).

This year, Saskatchewan featured in the top 10, occupying the 6th place and becoming the highest-ranked Canadian province followed by Alberta (12th). British Columbia (14th) was the worst performing Canadian jurisdiction, posing the greatest barriers to investment.

Investors pointed to the uncertainty concerning disputed land claims, the cost of regulatory compliance, and the uncertainty concerning environmental regulations as the major areas of concern in Canadian provinces compared with US states. In particular this year, 86 percent of respondents for British Columbia, 56 percent for Alberta, and 44 percent for Saskatchewan indicated that uncertainty concerning land claims was a deterrent for investment. In contrast, none of the respondents for Kansas and Mississippi and only 5 percent of respondents for Texas were deterred by this factor. Overall, on average, 62 percent of respondents were deterred by the uncertainty concerning land claims in Canada compared to 24 percent in the United States.

On regulatory factors, all the respondents for British Columbia, 73 percent for Alberta, and 44 percent for Saskatchewan pointed to the cost of regulatory compliance as a deterrent for investment whereas 10 percent indicated this was an issue for Oklahoma and 17 percent said it was an issue for Texas. On average, 73 percent of respondents for Canada are deterred by the cost of regulatory compliance, compared to 35 percent for the United States.

An Alberta/Texas comparison also demonstrates how results vary by region: 81 percent of respondents pointed to the uncertainty concerning environmental regulations as a deterrent to investment in Alberta compared with 13 percent of respondents for Texas. Overall, the percentage of respondents for the Canadian provinces indicating that this factor was a deterrent to investment was, on average, 63 percent compared to 38 percent for the United States.

Our analysis of the 2022 survey results indicates that negative sentiment by the industry’s senior executives regarding key factors driving petroleum investment decisions continue to be higher in many Canadian provinces than in competing American jurisdictions. In fact, the US performs better than Canada in 15 out of the 16 policy factors.

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