The Nordic country’s fund — now worth C$2.6 trillion — is explained at the Norges Bank Investment Management website:
The Government Pension Fund Global was established after Norway discovered oil in the North Sea. The fund was set up to shield the economy from ups and downs in oil revenue. It also serves as a financial reserve and as a long-term savings plan so that both current and future generations of Norway get to benefit from our oil wealth.
Each year, the Norwegian government can spend only a small part of the fund, but this still amounts to almost 20 percent of the government budget.
There is a broad political consensus on how the fund should be managed. The less we spend today, the better the position we will be in to deal with downturns and crises in the future. Budget surpluses are transferred to the fund, while deficits are covered with money from the fund. In other words, the authorities can spend more in hard times and less in good times.

Even our not-so-ancient ancestors needed only a basic understanding of small quantities. About 100 years ago, settlers in North Vancouver’s Deep Cove paid $15 for an unserviced lot near the waterfront. The Bank of Canada says that’s about $260 in today’s dollars. The BC Assessment Authority calculates that same site is worth $1.2 million today.
Amounts in the trillions are almost beyond our comprehension, but we may better understand Norway’s financial situation by looking at the oil and gas fund’s value for each person living in the country. The per capita value is $456,000.
If British Columbia had a resources fund equal in per capita value to that of Norway’s, the pool of dollars would be equivalent to 32x the provincial government’s projected revenue for 2025. The mythical fund would be almost 20x BC’s total provincial debt.
Of course, our governments believe that resources belong to those who exploit them today and that future generations have no right to a share of the province’s current asset values.
Categories: Norway, oil and gas, Taxation


What, no mention of Alberta’s Heritage Fund? It was created long before Norway’s fund, so it too must have accumulated a huge balance … mustn’t it?
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The balance of Norway’s 35-year-old oil and gas fund is 100x that of Alberta’s 49 year-old Heritage fund.
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24B.
Doesnt help that they never hired anyone from Norway?
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Investing in Canada has never been a Canadian political ideal.
Can’t skim without using “foreign investment”
So the process was sell off cheap, skim money or wink wink future considerations, create minimal paying Canadian jobs.
Taking care of Canadians welfare and creating community and social cohesion
was vilified as welfare state, communism and socialism.
Brutal self reliance and predatory capitalism makes the elite richer and divides the masses into haves and have nots, encourages criminality and degrades mentality to a constant state of survival mode.
All well planned and disguised as humane democracy.
And thats why we can’t have nice things.
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4.3 m barrels a day south 97% of exports? at 10-13$us a barrel less of WCS due to lack of competition.?
pipeline to burnaby and abbotsford fork 40% goes south at abbotsford 30 shipped south at end of pipe and 30 elsewhere.?so 70 of pipe stills goes south.?.So much for pricing competition.?
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