A landlocked gamble
Alberta has no ocean port. Almost everything we sell reaches the world through Canada. Separation would put a border between us and our biggest market.
Why borders hurt Alberta most
No coastline, no leverage
Every barrel, bushel, and shipment relies on routes through British Columbia, the Prairies, and beyond. A border turns our lifelines into checkpoints.
Tariffs on our biggest customer
The rest of Canada buys billions in Alberta goods. As a separate country, that trade could face tariffs, quotas, and delays overnight.
Losing Canada's trade deals
USMCA, CETA, and CPTPP open doors for Alberta exporters today. Separation means renegotiating every one of them from a weaker position.
Pipelines cross a new border
The pipelines that carry Alberta energy run through other provinces. Separation hands enormous leverage to the neighbours we'd now negotiate with.
A landlocked, concentrated trade picture
Alberta relies on a few markets and on routes through other provinces to reach them.
Open doors or hard borders
If Alberta separates
- Customs borders with every neighbour
- Tariffs on trade with the rest of Canada
- Renegotiating every global trade deal
- Pipelines crossing foreign territory
- Higher costs passed on to consumers
If Alberta stays
- Tariff-free access across all of Canada
- Guaranteed routes to ocean ports
- Membership in USMCA, CETA, and CPTPP
- Pipelines protected within one country
- Lower prices and reliable supply chains
Sources
- Statistics Canada, Table 12-10-0175-01 — about 89% of Alberta's international merchandise exports went to the United States (2024). StatCan.
- Statistics Canada, Table 12-10-0088-01 — Alberta's interprovincial exports (~$98.5B) were about one-third of its total exports (2022). StatCan.
- Government of Alberta — Alberta is landlocked with no ocean port; exports reach tidewater only through other provinces. alberta.ca.
- Trade Commissioner Service — Canada has 15 free trade agreements covering 51 countries, which Alberta accesses as part of Canada. Global Affairs Canada.
- Canada Energy Regulator — ~93% of Canadian crude oil exports went to the United States (2024). CER.
- Angus Reid Institute (May 2026) — 60% of Albertans would vote to remain in Canada. Angus Reid.
This is a demonstration site. Figures are sourced where shown.
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