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Brian Jean pumps up support for 'Owners' Discount' fuel savings

Fort McMurray-Lac La Biche MLA Brian Jean was at the Ponoka Stampede last weekend, hoping to rope in some votes and support for his bid to be the next Premier of Alberta.

It was as good a place as any to release another of his campaign platform items, but Jean knows that away from the rodeo grounds and midway roller coasters of the stampede weekend, Albertans are coping with their own wild ride when it comes to the rising costs of fuel at the pumps.

His latest promise to make life easier and more affordable for struggling Albertans is to remove provincial royalties on any barrels of Alberta oil refined for diesel and gasoline sales in the Alberta market. He figures the royalty break would translate to about 15 cents a litre less at the pump. Calling it an "owners' discount," Jean says the promise will be kept if he is elected as the province's next premier.

Jean said he would offer the royalty-break in addition to the current provincial government's fuel rebate program that is supposed to be saving consumers about 10 cents a litre at the pumps.

When asked where the shortfall from reductions would be made up, Jean said royalties would still be coming in from the 90 per cent of the oil that leaves the province. He also says his plan will examine every step along the oil-to-gas pump process in Alberta to find efficiencies.

 

'Ripped off at the pumps'

"It's going to be about transparency and accountability, and we need that from all parts of the process, up to the retailers," he said, doubling-down on that comment a few days later, sending out a media release saying that "Albertans are getting ripped off at the pumps."

His comment went further to say that a "fair price" based on current wholesale rates of fuel and the current provincial rebate should be at $1.55 per litre. In Lac La Biche over the two weeks, the price for a litre of unleaded gasoline has ranged from a high of $1.89.9 to $1.81.9

"Based on today's (July 6) wholesale rate of $1.195 a litre and taxes of $0.2105 a litre a fair price for gasoline in the next few days should be around $1.55 a litre. If it isn't by the weekend, Albertans are getting ripped off," he said, adding that his latest campaign pledge would reduce that fair price by another 10 per cent at current wholesale prices. "Now imagine another 15 cents a litre coming off of that, if the oil used to make the gasoline was royalty free?"

Reducing the price at the pumps isn't just about helping motorists, he said. It's about helping to reduce increasing grocery, retail, and service prices due to increased transportation expense.

"Reducing fuel prices is the key to fighting inflation in Alberta," Jean said.

"If I am elected Premier, I will make sure we have the lowest fuel prices in Canada."

— Fort McMurray-Lac La Biche MLA Brian Jean 

In his latest plan, every retail fuel station would have stickers outlining the cost percentages for each litre when it comes to refining, upgrading, production, delivery and retail profit.

Jean is clear that he is not taking direct shots at retailers or oil companies or distributors with his new campaign promise. He just wants to take the mystery out of the process.

"I'm not doing this for the oil companies or the fuel retailers, I'm doing this fo all Albertans ... We are concerned about the process all the way through, and we need the transparency, we need to pass on those savings," he told Lakeland This Week.

Brian Jean fillup file

He is committed to working with oil producers and refiners to find the most effective system to realize cost reductions.

According to Jean, Alberta produces about four million barrels of oil and equivalents a day. More than 90 per cent of that total is exported out of the province, with the remainder is refined in Alberta into diesel and gasoline for provincial consumers. He says that feedstock oil and bitumen — the raw resource — make up about half of the cost of the final, pump-ready product. At current royalty rates, he said, about 15 cents per litre of fuel is the royalty cost of the feedstock fuel.

Those savings — and more — should come back to all Albertans, and not be absorbed into a hidden maze of profits and costs.

“Albertans own the oil, we can give them the benefit of that in a way that reduces costs and inflation, quickly and permanently,” the Fort McMurray-Lac La Biche MLA said.

 



Rob McKinley

About the Author: Rob McKinley

Rob has been in the media, marketing and promotion business for 30 years, working in the public sector, as well as media outlets in major metropolitan markets, smaller rural communities and Indigenous-focused settings.
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