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Alberta will curtail oil output to shore up prices if needed: Kenney

Rows of steam generators line a road at the Cenovus Energy Christina Lake Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) project 120 km south of Fort McMurray. Cenovus currently produces 100,000 barrels of heavy oil per day at their Christina Lake tar sands project. REUTERS - Todd Korol/FILE
Rows of steam generators line a road at the Cenovus Energy Christina Lake Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) project 120 km south of Fort McMurray. Cenovus currently produces 100,000 barrels of heavy oil per day at their Christina Lake tar sands project. REUTERS - Todd Korol/FILE

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OTTAWA - Energy-rich Alberta will curtail oil production if necessary to help an industry which is set to start laying off workers in response to a global price war, says Premier Jason Kenney.

Kenney said he was worried crude-by-rail shipments could plunge as a result of the price slump to around 100,000 barrels per day in April from the expected 500,000 barrels per day in March. This, he said, could cause inventories to balloon.

"We will not allow that to happen. We will use the curtailment tool responsibly to ensure at least a survival price for our producers to get through this period," he said.

Alberta has curtailed production for more than a year because of congested pipelines. The province is restricting production to 3.81 million barrels per day in March and April.

The oil sector in Alberta - home to most of Canada's massive known crude reserves - has yet to recover from a 2015 price shock, Kenney said.

"We, unfortunately, do expect to see a number of layoff announcements coming from the energy sector in the next two or three weeks," he told reporters at Calgary's airport before flying to Ottawa.

The 10 provincial premiers were due to meet federal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau but the meeting was cancelled due to COVID-19 concerns. Kenney said he would have asked for financial assistance for laid-off workers.

Trudeau said earlier that he would have raised the affect of falling oil prices on energy-producing regions.

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