ALBERTA GAMBLING REVENUES RIVAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION
3 September 2010
Gambling revenues are fuelling Alberta's
government, with income comparable to both oil and gas
Residents in the Alberta province of Canada like to
gamble, and to a lesser extent enjoy throwing back the
odd alcoholic beverage, it appears from recent survey
results published by the National Post newspaper this
week.
So much so, that revenues from gambling
(Cdn$1.3 billion) and alcohol (Cdn$700 million) rival
those from energy resources like conventional natural
gas and crude oil income.
The newspaper reports
that in the current budget year royalties from
conventional natural gas are forecast to hit only
Cdn$1.9-billion this year - way down from the Cdn6
billion of four years ago. Estimated conventional crude
oil income for the year is also projected to reach about
the same amount.
The numbers continue a trend
from the 2009-10 fiscal year, and as the National Post
observes, are part of an intriguing trend in which
government income from gambling and alcohol consumption
is increasingly rivalling that which it derives from the
province's geological wealth.
"It's a reliable
source [of revenue] and they depend on it. That's the
worrisome thing," Robert Williams, a co-ordinator with
the Alberta Gaming Research Institute, told the
newspaper, adding that Albertans are already near the
top of per-capita gambling in Canada, spending an
average Cdn$951 per person in 2009 - far more than
almost every other province. [Ed. note: see following
story for Stats Canada numbers]
Revenues from
alcohol and gambling are key to social program funding,
the report notes, with government income from alcohol
going into general revenue for spending, while gambling
dollars are allocated to the Alberta Lottery Fund, which
then distributes the cash among hundreds of groups and
agencies in the province.
"You've got a real
variety of where the money goes," said Lynn Hutchings-Mah
of the Alberta Gaming and Liquor Commission. "The
grants do go back to support a lot of volunteer and
community projects and initiatives."
Alberta
faces a record Cdn$4.8-billion deficit this year, and
revenues from oil and gas are declining.
Bob
Ascah, director of the University of Alberta's Institute
for Public Economics, said low natural gas revenues are
part of a new reality in the province, at least for the
next few years.
He told the National Post that
several factors are driving the decline, including
falling conventional gas production and growing shale
gas activity in the United States, which has reduced
U.S. reliance on Canadian gas.
Ascah said he
expects to see Alberta taking a considered look at
forays by British Columbia, Quebec and some Maritime
provinces into online gambling, along with the
possibility that Ontario may also be making such a move.
Such a venture could provide much needed new income
sources that aren't tied to volatile oil and gas.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|