Canada: big oil profiteering from high gas prices | Canada | Americas

2022-07-15 22:52:56 By : Ms. Joyce Lu

Gas prices have shot up to around $2 a litre in most of Canada. This marks an increase of 50 per cent since the beginning of the year, and is a huge burden on working class families. Some academics believe that these costs are discretionary, but the reality is that most workers have no choice but to pay these high prices. Canadians are shelling out more and more to simply get to and from work. Workers need a socialist solution to the high cost of gas.

Global News conducted a poll to investigate the ways that Canadians have changed their habits in response to the current situation. It released its findings in a playfully titled article, “As inflation surges, Canadians find creative ways to save, cut costs”. The article goes on to list the creative ways that Canadian workers are cutting costs: 54 per cent were dining out less, 47 per cent were putting off new purchases like clothes, and 46 per cent were cutting back on entertainment spending. Seventeen per cent of parents were cutting back on their kids’ organized sports, 24 per cent said they were eating less meat, and 22 per cent said they were buying fewer fresh fruits and vegetables. Eight per cent of those surveyed said they deleted or did not renew a medical prescription in order to offset inflation. Workers have had to get “creative” by cutting back on the small luxuries that make life bearable, and the really “creative” ones have cut back on essential items such as medicine.

While workers struggle to make ends meet, the energy giants are making eye-watering profits, and they have been since late last year. Imperial Oil reported bringing in $908 million in profits in the third quarter of 2021, which marked its highest quarterly net income in more than 30 years. In 2022, Canada’s largest oil and gas producer, Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., doubled its profits compared to last year, bringing in $3.1 billion in the first quarter alone. Cenovus saw its profits soar sevenfold to $1.6 billion in the first quarter. Suncor tripled its profits to $2.95 billion in the first quarter and hiked its dividends to investors to the highest in its history. Interestingly, while making these lucrative profits, Suncor actually decreased production in the first quarter. While ordinary people suffer from these climbing gas prices, many of the oil and gas companies are raking in record profits and some are doing this while producing less.

The pandemic in 2020 caused a sharp decline in demand for fuel. This is because during the lockdown there was a decline in manufacturing (which requires fuel) and fewer cars on the road. While demand for fuel collapsed, the supply stayed the same, leading to very low fuel prices. Commuters will fondly remember when fuel was under 70 cents per litre! The oil barons weren’t so fond. In response they cut back on production, reducing the global supply of oil. This brought prices up to more or less pre-pandemic levels. They laid off tens of thousands of workers in the process, but order was restored!

The oil barons ignored one inevitability (a rather obvious one): eventually the lockdowns would end and workers would return to their daily commutes and the demand for fuel would rise again. This is exactly what happened earlier this year. Demand for fuel reached pre-pandemic levels but the oil barons were reluctant to ramp up production and increase the fuel supply. The result? A growing supply shortage, which resulted in rising fuel prices. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine exacerbated the supply shortage of fuel by disrupting some global supply chains, but the oil barons are ultimately responsible for the supply shortage which has driven up fuel prices and which they are currently profiting from.

While ordinary people suffer from these climbing gas prices, many of the oil and gas companies are raking in record profits / Image: shannonpatrick17, Wikimedia Commons

The only way we will see pre-pandemic fuel prices again is if the energy sector increases the output of fuel. If they increase the output, the supply shortage will end and prices will come down. This would be great for society as a whole but bad for the energy giants, who hold all the power. It would mean an end to their superprofits. Unsurprisingly, they are reluctant to do this. Via Reuters: “The Canadian Natural, the country’s biggest producer, plans to bump up oil and gas output by 5% this year, while Cenovus (CVE.TO), Canada’s second-largest oil and gas producer, said its 2022 production guidance published in December remains unchanged.” The energy companies don’t plan on fixing this crisis anytime soon. Why would they? While ordinary people suffer, they are making superprofits!

The energy giants would only take measures to lower fuel prices if they lost so many consumers as a result of the high prices that it started cutting into their profits. This is not a serious possibility when it comes to fuel. What are people going to do, ride their bike to work? This isn’t an option for those who commute long distances. Or maybe take transit instead? For many commuters this would mean spending an extra hour or more getting to work each day. Could everyone maybe sell their current car and buy an expensive electric car instead? To pose the question is to answer it. For most workers these are not real options. Regardless of the price, ordinary people will continue to purchase fuel because we need fuel to get to and from work, and we will pay for it by cutting back on other things.

Rafi Tahmazian, portfolio manager at Canoe Financial in Calgary, which owns shares in oil sands producers, summed it up best. “They can sit with their feet up right now, with money flowing into their pockets, while hardly working,” Tahmazian said of the energy companies. He continued, “Why would they want to be a growth business again?”

While these executives sit with their feet up and rake in the profits, Canadian workers are forced to find “creative” ways to scrape by. And with summer fast approaching, gas prices are projected to climb even higher, like they do every year. How many more families will have to cut back on fresh produce next time the price of fuel goes up?

Luckily for us, the politicians have leapt into action to save the day! Tory politicians across Canada propose to solve the crisis by getting rid of fuel taxes. In Ontario Doug Ford has promised to lower taxes on oil and gas from July to December. Taxes will be lowered by five cents, from 14 cents a litre to nine cents a litre. The theory is that there will be a five-cent per litre reduction in prices, but capitalist theory does not always match reality. It will only happen if the energy giants don’t respond to the five-cent-per-litre tax reduction by raising prices by five cents. Assuming Ford’s plan does work and the price of fuel does go down by five cents a litre, we are still left paying at least $1.90 for a litre of gas. Reducing taxes is no solution, and leads to austerity in public services.

The Ontario NDP proposes to solve the crisis by introducing gas price regulations. The ONDP proposed a private members bill (three times) to this effect. The proposal explains, “The Ontario Energy Board can and should regulate the retail price and wholesale mark-up of gas — so that prices are fair, stable and competitive regardless of where you live.” It goes on to point out, “Five other provinces have some form of gas price regulation to keep the price at the pump fair, including neighbouring Quebec.” Unfortunately for the ONDP, Quebec’s price controls aren’t exactly working. Currently, fuel is more expensive in price-controlled Quebec than it is in Ontario! Clearly artificially imposed price controls don’t work in practice. The only way to genuinely bring down fuel prices is to hire more workers, drill more rigs and ramp up production, or alternatively, to massively expand alternative energy infrastructure. Unfortunately the government cannot make that happen because the energy sector is privately owned. You can’t control what you don’t own.

None of the solutions proposed by the politicians can solve the current crisis. The energy giants can do whatever they want because they own the rigs, the mines, and the refineries. They use this power to squeeze as much out of us as possible. While they gouge us at the pump, they are also taking handouts from the government that are paid for with our tax dollars. In 2020 the industry took at least $18 billion in handouts while laying off tens of thousands of workers. This year, 2022, while they are profiteering off the soaring fuel prices of their own making, they are getting government handouts on top of that.

The fossil fuel industry has been taking billions in subsidies from us every year for decades and we don’t actually know how much, due to a lack of transparency. A report by the International Monetary Fund released in 2014 estimated that the fossil fuel industry in Canada receives an average of $34 billion a year in subsidies. It’s anyone’s guess what the total amount is that the fossil fuel industry has leeched off of taxpayers over the years. This is because the exact amount is a secret, between the capitalist state and the fossil fuel industry. If it was public knowledge that the government has given them our money while they screw us over, a lot of people would ask why.

As long as the energy sector remains in private hands the decision makers will be the capitalists who own these companies. Their decisions are only driven by one thing: how to maximise profits. We are seeing today how far they are willing to take it. They laid off tens of thousands of workers during a pandemic. They have been gouging workers in a time when everything is getting more expensive and they have no intention of stopping. And all the while, they are taking billions of dollars in our taxpayer money to further line their pockets. They are able to do all of this because they own the energy sector. Reforms like tax cuts and price controls will not solve the crisis at hand because ultimately the power still lies in the hands of the capitalists.

Fuel is a basic necessity that we need to function as a society, it should not be in private hands. The workers need to take control of the industry and bring it under common ownership and democratically run it themselves. We can collectively decide how much fuel we need and how we want to distribute it. A collectively owned and democratically run energy sector would also make it possible to begin retooling production to finally transition away from fossil fuels to sustainable alternatives. The Canadian state is clearly in bed with the fossil fuel industry, as Justin Trudeau admitted when he said “Canada is a major oil-producing company!” With collective ownership we could also guarantee against job losses. Under private ownership jobs in the sector are under constant threat, because the capitalists are always looking for ways to save money and maximize profit. We need a socialist solution for workers in the industry and the wider working class facing high prices. Capitalism offers no way out.

Originally published on 2 June at marxist.ca |

If you want more information about joining the IMT, fill in this form. We will get back to you as soon as possible.

In Defence of Marxism is committed to safeguarding your privacy. At all times we aim to respect any personal data you share with us, or that we receive from other organisations, and keep it safe. This Privacy Policy (“Policy”) sets out our data collection and processing practices and your options regarding the ways in which your personal information is used.

This Policy contains important information about your personal rights to privacy. Please read it carefully to understand how we use your personal data. We may update this Policy from time to time without notice to you, so please check it regularly.

The provision of your personal data to us is voluntary. However, without providing us with your personal data, you will be unable to (as appropriate): contact us; subscribe to our mailing list; subscribe to any of our publications; or receive information about In Defence of Marxism.

(1) When you give it to us DIRECTLY

You may give us your personal data in order to subscribe to a newsletter or publication, when you contact us by phone, email or post, when you sign a petition / statement, and/or when you donate money to us.

(2) When you give it to us INDIRECTLY

Your information will also be provided to us when you follow us or otherwise interact with on or via Twitter, when you like and/or join our page on Facebook or interact with us in other ways on or via Facebook.

(3) When you give permission to OTHER ORGANISATIONS to share it or it is AVAILABLE PUBLICLY

We may combine information you provide to us with information available from external publicly available sources. Depending on your privacy settings for social media services, we may also access information from those accounts or services. We use this information to gain a better understanding of you and to improve our communications and fundraising activities.

(4) When you visit our WEBSITE

We use cookies to identify you when you visit our website. Please refer to our Cookies Policy for details on the way our use of cookies affects your personal data.

We may collect, store and use the following kinds of personal data:

(1) We will typically hold your name and contact details, including telephone number, location, and e-mail address. However, we may request other information where it is appropriate and relevant, for example:

(2) any communication preferences you give;

(3) information about your computer and about your visits to and use of this website including your IP address, geographical location, browser type, referral source, length of visit and number of page views; and/or

(4) any other information shared with us as per clause 1.

Do we process sensitive personal information?

Applicable law recognises certain categories of personal information as sensitive and therefore requiring more protection, including political opinions and trade union membership. In limited cases, we may collect sensitive personal data about you. We would only collect sensitive personal data if there is a clear reason for doing so; and will only do so with your explicit consent.

Personal data, however provided to us, will be used for the purposes specified in this Policy or in relevant parts of the website.

We may use your personal information to:

(1) Enable you to subscribe to our hard copy publications;

(2) Send you information about our work, campaigns, organisations and any other information, products or services that we provide (this will not be done without your consent);

(3) Provide you with the services, products or information you have requested;

(4) If you request, put you in touch with other supporters in your area (who have also provided such consent);

(5) Handle the administration of any donation or other payment you make via credit/debit card, cheque, standing order or BACS transfer;

(6) Collect payments from you and send statements and/or receipts to you;

(7) Conduct research into the impact of our activity / campaigns;

(8) Deal with enquiries and complaints made by you relating to the website or us in general;

(9) Make petition submissions to third parties, where you have signed a petition and the third party is a target of the campaign to which the petition relates; and/or

(10) Audit and/or administer our accounts.

We may use some of your personal information to analyse our digital performance, for example to see how our website can be improved to help us achieve the purposes set out in section 9 below, to record how you are using our website or to assess the popularity of different articles / campaigns.

For more information on how we use your personal information in relation to Google Analytics, please view our cookie policy by clicking this link cookies policy

You can opt-out of the collection of information for such purposes here: http://www.aboutads.info/choices

Where you have provided appropriate consent, we will contact you by telephone and e-mail, with targeted communications to let you know about our events and/or activities that we consider may be of particular interest; about the work of In Defence of Marxism; and to ask for donations or other support.

All financial transactions carried out on our website are handled through either:

We will provide your personal data to PayPal / GoCardless only to the extent necessary for the purposes of processing payments for transactions you enter into with us. We do not store your financial details.

We do not knowingly process data of any person under the age of 16. If we come to discover, or have reason to believe, that you are 15 and under and we are holding your personal information, we will delete that information within a reasonable period and withhold our services accordingly.

We endeavour to ensure that there are appropriate and proportionate technical and organisational measures to prevent the loss, destruction, misuse, alteration, unauthorised disclosure or of access to your personal information.

Your information is only accessible by appropriately trained staff and volunteers.

We may also use agencies and/or suppliers to process data on our behalf. We may also merge or partner with other organisations and in so doing transfer and/or acquire personal data.

Please note that some countries outside of the EEA have a lower standard of protection for personal data, including lower security requirements and fewer rights for individuals. We may transfer and/or store personal data collected from you to and/or at a destination outside the European Economic Area (“EEA”). Such personal data may be processed by agencies and/or suppliers operating outside the EEA. If we transfer and/or store your personal data outside the EEA we will take reasonable steps to ensure that the recipient implements appropriate measures to protect your personal data.

Otherwise than as set out in this Privacy Policy, we will only ever share your data with your informed consent.

Where we rely on your consent to use your personal information, you have the right to withdraw that consent at any time. This includes the right to ask us to stop using your personal information for direct marketing purposes or to be unsubscribed from our email list at any time. You also have the following rights:

(1) Right to be informed – you have the right to be told how your personal information will be used. This Policy and any other policies and statements used on our website and in our communications are intended to provide you with a clear and transparent description of how your personal information may be used.

(2) Right of access – you can write to us to ask for confirmation of what information we hold on you and to request a copy of that information. Provided we are satisfied that you are entitled to see the information requested and we have successfully confirmed your identity, we have 30 days to comply.

(3) Right of erasure – as from 25 May 2018, you can ask us for your personal information to be deleted from our records.

(4) Right of rectification – if you believe our records of your personal information are inaccurate, you have the right to ask for those records to be updated.

(5) Right to restrict processing – you have the right to ask for processing of your personal data to be restricted if there is disagreement about its accuracy or legitimate usage.

(6) Right to data portability – to the extent required by the General Data Protection Regulations (“GDPR”) where we are processing your personal information (i) under your consent, (ii) because such processing is necessary for the performance of a contract to which you are party or to take steps at your request prior to entering into a contact or (iii) by automated means, you may ask us to provide it to you – or another service provider – in a machine-readable format.

To exercise these rights, please send a description of the personal information in question using the contact details in section 15 below. You can also unsubscribe from our email list by sending a blank email to ne ws-unsubscribe@marxist.com

Where we consider that the information with which you have provided us does not enable us to identify the personal information in question, we reserve the right to ask for (i) personal identification and/or (ii) further information.

We are required to have one or more lawful grounds to process your personal information. Only 4 of these are relevant to us:

We will ask for your consent to use your information to send you electronic communications such as newsletters and and fundraising emails, and if you ever share sensitive personal information with us.

Most of our interactions with supporters are voluntary and not contractual. However, sometimes it will be necessary to process personal information so that we can enter contractual relationships with people. For example, if you subscribe to one of our publications, or purchase merchandise online.

Sometimes we will be obliged to process your personal information due to legal obligations which are binding on us. We will only ever do so when strictly necessary.

Applicable law allows personal information to be collected and used if it is reasonably necessary for our legitimate activities (as long as its use is fair, balanced and does not unduly impact individuals’ rights).

We will rely on this ground to process your personal data when it is not practical or appropriate to ask for consent.

These include (but are not limited to) promoting socialist policies

When we use your personal information, we will consider if it is fair and balanced to do so and if it is within your reasonable expectations. We will balance your rights and our legitimate interests to ensure that we use your personal information in ways that are not unduly intrusive or unfair in other ways.

The length of time each category of data will be retained will vary depending on how long we need to process it for, the reason it was collected, and in line with any statutory requirements. After this point the data will either be deleted, or we may retain a secure anonymised record for research and analytical purposes.  

In the event that you ask us to stop sending you direct marketing/fundraising/other electronic communications, we will keep your name on our internal suppression list to ensure that you are not contacted again.

We keep this Privacy Policy under regular review and reserve the right to update from time-to-time by posting an updated version on our website, not least because of changes in applicable law. We recommend that you check this Privacy Policy occasionally to ensure you remain happy with it. We may also notify you of changes to our privacy policy by email.

We link our website directly to other sites. This Privacy Policy does not cover external websites and we are not responsible for the privacy practices or content of those sites. We encourage you to read the privacy policies of any external websites you visit via links on our website.

You can check the personal data we hold about you, and ask us to update it where necessary, by emailing us at webmaster@marxist.com

We are not required by law to have a “Data Protection Officer” – however we have a Data Protection Manager.

Please let us know if you have any queries or concerns whatsoever about the way in which your data is being processed by emailing the Data Protection Manager at webmaster@marxist.com

This website uses cookies, you can find out more and set your preferences here. By continuing to use this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy