U.S. Facts
Overview
- Canada is the top supplier of oil to the United States.
- Our oil reserves are the second largest in the world, behind only Saudi Arabia.
- Canada’s reserves contain 170 billion barrels, and 97 per cent are located in the oil sands.
- In 2007, Canada exported nearly 2.5 million barrels of crude oil and petroleum products per day to the United States.
Economics
- From 2000-2020, oil sands production could create enough work outside of Canada to employ nearly 37,000 people for 30 years.
- American companies supply roughly 87 per cent of the import market in the Canadian oil sands sector.
- Alberta, the province in which the majority of Canada’s oil sands are located, exports 62 per cent of its GDP. The United Sates receives three quarters of Alberta’s energy exports.
Concerns, challenges and responses
Air
- In the United States, coal is the energy source for nearly half of the country’s electricity generation. Coal-related carbon dioxide emissions alone account for 32.8 per cent of America’s greenhouse gas emissions
- Producers have made great strides in reducing the amount of emissions per barrel of bitumen extracted from the oil sands. The equivalent of 2.6 million tonnes of reductions have been made – the same as of taking more than all of the cars in Hawaii off the road.
- Air quality around oil sands operations are monitored regularly and consistently rank better than major American cities such as Los Angeles, New York, Seattle and Dallas.
- The province of Alberta has committed $4 billion toward climate change initiatives, including $2 billion for public transit and $2 billion for carbon capture and storage (CCS). This is the largest CCS investment in the world and is the per capita equivalent of a $340 billion investment in the United States.
Land
- Canada’s oil sands are found below the surface of 54,054 square miles of land, an area smaller than the State of Illinois.
- The oil sands located in the Canadian boreal forest. The Canadian boreal forest is as large as 88 per cent of the entire United States land area.
- In more than 40 years, oil sands mining has disturbed about one hundredth of one per cent of the Canadian boreal forest – some 193 square miles, or a total land area 35 square miles smaller than the City of Chicago.
Water allocation
- Coal mining in the United States consumes roughly 31 per cent (84 million cubic meters) more water yearly than all oil sands production.



















