Cautious Calm in Canada’s Oil Patch as Prices Slide

Oil’s recent nosedive—thanks to tariffs, OPEC+ surprises, and good old-fashioned recession fears—has put a chill over Alberta’s energy sector. But if you were expecting panic from Canadian oil CEOs, think again. The tone out of Toronto today is clear: don’t flinch.

InPlay Oil’s Doug Bartole isn’t pulling rigs or cutting spending just yet, despite the price rout. “Let’s take a longer view,” he told Reuters this week. Translation: don’t panic, at least not at $60. The CEO said, however, that maybe it would be hard to keep from sweating if oil sinks to $50. The small company prides itself on its agility, so if prices keep sliding, they are expected to be able to pivot quickly.

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Birchcliff Energy’s Chris Carlsen echoed the sentiment—less alarm, more quiet calculation. For gas-weighted producers like Birchcliff, the oil slide might even be a hidden win. Fewer oil wells mean less associated gas, tightening supply and supporting natural gas prices. There’s always a silver lining if you squint hard enough.

But even this measured calm has limits—Alberta’s broader economy is already feeling the squeeze. With WTI dropping $10 in a week to four-year lows, and Goldman and JP Morgan both raising their recession odds, the mood is shifting from optimism to “let’s see how this plays out.” The provincial budget, built on a $68 WTI average, is already underwater.

Sentiment, not spreadsheets, may be the deciding factor here. Producers know how quickly the market can turn—2020 isn’t exactly a distant memory. But the cautious stance we’re seeing now isn’t about denial. It’s a bet that this storm, like others before it, will pass. Whether that proves prudent depends on how long oil stays in the danger zone.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

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