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.
‘;
document.write(write_html);
}
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
More Top Reads From Oilprice.com
- Job Numbers Rise in Alaska’s Arctic Thanks to Oil Projects
- Your Next iPhone Could Cost $2,300—But Oil Prices Might Stay Stuck
- Taiwan Invested $165 Billion. Trump Hit Back With Tariffs.












