Alberta working with Ontario and Saskatchewan to improve energy corridors
ALBERTA, CANADA, AUG 8 – The study aims to create a pipeline and rail corridor to boost energy security, create thousands of jobs, and reduce reliance on U.S. energy infrastructure, officials said.
- On Aug. 7, 2025, the Ontario government issued a request for proposals through Infrastructure Ontario to conduct a feasibility study exploring a new economic and energy corridor between Alberta and Ontario.
- Following a recent provincial memorandum, talks resumed as U.S. tariff threats this year revived pipeline expansion discussions among Ontario, Alberta, and Saskatchewan.
- The study outlines links to Southern Ontario refineries, including new Alberta-to-Ontario pipelines and a deep-sea port on James Bay, using Ontario and Canadian steel.
- According to Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, the corridor would help secure long-term energy access, create thousands of jobs, and channel Alberta’s energy to markets across Canada and around the world.
- Through the RFP, the Ontario government asked, 'the study to evaluate strategies for Indigenous equity participation and consider establishing a Canadian Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
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While Quebec is still reluctant to say yes to the construction of a new pipeline on its territory, Ontario is pushing the accelerator to create an energy corridor between the province and Alberta through Saskatchewan and Manitoba.


Ontario Seeks Bids on Feasibility Study for New East-West Pipeline, James Bay Port
Ontario is seeking bids on a feasibility study for a new East-West energy corridor that will include Alberta-to-Ontario pipelines and a deep-sea port on the coast of James Bay. The province issued a request for proposals on Aug. 7 for a feasibility study for a new energy corridor that would bring Western Canadian oil and gas to refineries in southern Ontario and tidewater ports through pipelines made in Canada using Ontario and Canadian steel. T…
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