Canada’s oil sector shouldn’t panic, stay competitive after Maduro’s seizure: experts
EDMONTON — Two political scientists say U.S. President Donald Trump’s interest in transforming Venezuela’s oil-rich sector hasn’t created panic or shaken up Canada’s oil industry.
Heather Exner-Pirot, director of energy, natural resources and environment with the think-tank Macdonald-Laurier Institute, said the U.S. president first needs to get through the global political unrest his Saturday capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has created.
“We’ve always known that Venezuela is a competitor and has those resources, but obviously they’ve been marked by corruption, violence and their assets and their production has atrophied,” she said in a Sunday interview.
“Just because they have oil in the ground doesn’t mean that they can get it out logistically, so I don’t think anyone in this (sector) is immediately panicking.”


