The crude oil price today in Canada is tracked via Western Canadian Select (WCS) โ Canada's heavy oil benchmark, which trades at a discount to WTI. Canada is the world's 4th largest oil producer, with Alberta's oil sands holding the 3rd largest proven reserves globally. The final price in CAD depends on WCS USD price and the live USD/CAD exchange rate.
Canada is a paradox in the global oil market. It sits on the 3rd largest proven oil reserves in the world โ yet its crude benchmark, Western Canadian Select (WCS), consistently trades at a steep discount to global benchmarks. Why? Because Alberta's landlocked oil sands cannot easily reach tidewater. Every barrel must travel thousands of kilometres through pipelines โ mostly south to the United States โ before hitting a global price.
This page covers the live crude oil price today in Canada in CAD, the WCS discount explained, Alberta oil sands data, pipeline infrastructure, province-wise fuel prices, and links to our global crude oil price tracker.
Canada as a Global Oil Powerhouse
Canada produces approximately 5.6 million barrels per day (bbl/day), making it the 4th largest producer globally. Over 80% of Canada's oil exports go to the United States, making Canada the largest foreign supplier to US refineries.
| Metric | Value | Global Rank |
|---|---|---|
| Crude Oil Production | ~5.6 million bbl/day | #4 |
| Proven Oil Reserves | ~170 billion barrels | #3 |
| Daily Oil Exports | ~4 million bbl/day | Largest US supplier |
| Oil Sands Share | >70% of production | Alberta (Athabasca) |
| Top Producers | Suncor, CNRL, Cenovus, Imperial | TSX & NYSE listed |
| Energy Regulator | Canada Energy Regulator (CER) | Federal body |
WCS vs WTI vs Brent โ Canada's Benchmark Explained
Western Canadian Select (WCS) is Canada's heavy crude oil benchmark, blended from Alberta oil sands bitumen with diluents. It is heavier and higher in sulphur than WTI, so refineries need extra processing โ hence the price discount.
| Benchmark | Type | Exchange | vs WTI | Canada Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WCS | Heavy Sour | CME/ICE | -$10 to -$25 | โ Main benchmark |
| WTI | Light Sweet | NYMEX | Base | โก Export reference |
| Brent | Light Sweet | ICE London | +$2 to +$5 | ๐ Global reference |
Alberta Oil Sands โ The World's Oil Chest
Alberta's oil sands โ in the Athabasca, Cold Lake, and Peace River regions โ contain approximately 165 billion barrels of proven economically recoverable bitumen. This is the largest oil reserve basin outside the Middle East.
Major Pipelines โ How Canada Moves Its Oil
Canada's oil pipeline network is the backbone of its petroleum economy. The Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX), completed in 2024, opened Pacific access for the first time โ reducing dependence on the US market.
How USD/CAD Rate Affects Oil Prices in Canada
Canada's crude is priced in US Dollars globally, but royalties, company revenues, and fuel costs are in Canadian Dollars (CAD). Both the WCS price and USD/CAD rate determine what Canadians actually pay.
| Scenario | WCS USD | USD/CAD | WCS CAD | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strong CAD | $57 | 1.25 | C$71 | Lower fuel costs |
| Neutral | $57 | 1.38 | C$79 | Average |
| Weak CAD | $57 | 1.45 | C$83 | Higher pump prices |
Crude Oil vs Petrol Prices Across Canadian Provinces
Retail gasoline prices vary significantly by province due to provincial fuel taxes, carbon levies, and refinery proximity. Alberta โ the oil-producing province โ typically has the lowest pump prices. British Columbia has the highest due to carbon levy and Metro Vancouver levies.
| Province | Gas Price (C$/L) | Key Tax Factor |
|---|---|---|
| Alberta | C$1.40โ1.55 | No provincial fuel tax |
| Saskatchewan | C$1.45โ1.60 | Low excise |
| Ontario | C$1.55โ1.70 | Fuel tax + carbon levy |
| Quebec | C$1.60โ1.75 | Cap-and-trade + QST |
| British Columbia | C$1.80โ2.10 | BC carbon tax + Vancouver levy |
โ ~45% = Crude oil cost (WCS/WTI)
โ ~20% = Refining & marketing margin
โ ~35% = Taxes (federal + provincial + carbon + GST/HST)
People Also Ask
Based on WCS, which trades $10โ25/barrel below WTI. The CAD price = WCS USD ร live USD/CAD rate. Check the live figure at the top of this page โ updated every market day.
YES โ WCS is always cheaper. The discount exists because WCS is heavy sour crude (harder to refine), Alberta is landlocked (higher transport cost), and pipeline constraints can force distressed pricing. Discount has ranged $10โ$50/barrel historically.
Crude accounts for ~45% of pump price. A $10/barrel WTI rise typically adds C$0.08โ0.12/litre at the pump after a 2โ4 week refinery lag. A weaker CAD amplifies the effect further.
YES โ Canada exports ~4 million bbl/day vs consuming ~2.4 million bbl/day. However, eastern provinces (Quebec, Atlantic Canada) still import foreign crude because Alberta pipeline infrastructure cannot reach them efficiently.
TMX (completed 2024) added 590,000 bbl/day of Pacific export capacity, opening access to Japanese, Korean, and Chinese refineries. Early shipments have helped moderately narrow the WCS discount, with full impact expected over the next 2โ3 years.
FAQ โ Crude Oil Price in Canada
What benchmark is used for crude oil pricing in Canada?
Which companies produce the most crude oil in Canada?
How does OPEC affect crude oil prices in Canada?
Is crude oil in Canada cheaper than other countries?
How often does the crude oil price in Canada update?
๐ Crude Oil Price in Other Countries
Conclusion
Canada holds the world's 3rd largest proven oil reserves yet consistently earns a discount through WCS. The WCS price in CAD depends on 3 factors: WTI USD price, WCS discount (pipeline capacity & crude quality), and the USD/CAD exchange rate. With TMX now operational, Canada's pricing power is gradually improving as Asian market access opens.
Track the live crude oil price globally on our crude oil price hub.
โ๏ธ Written by SK Jabedul Haque โ Finance & commodities expert, currentaffair.today. Updated: April 2026.