News ReleaseMinistry of Energy and MinesPublished: July 15, 2026

Northern Shield: proposed 3,300-km pipeline from Hardisty to Sarnia

A proposed 3,300-km pipeline would move 500,000–800,000 barrels/day of Alberta crude to Sarnia, trigger a feasibility study and Indigenous consultations by end of 2026.

Published
July 15, 2026
Source
Ministry of Energy and Mines
Release type
News Release
External ID
1007766

Summary

What happened

  • The government announced the proposed Northern Shield Energy Corridor: a 3,300-km pipeline from Hardisty, Alberta to the Sarnia refining and petrochemical hub.

By the numbers

  • Initial capacity: about 500,000 barrels per day, expandable to 800,000 barrels per day.
  • Projected timeline: a feasibility study (including costs, commercial models and related opportunities) is underway and expected to finish by the end of 2026.

Who it affects

  • Sarnia-Lambton refineries and petrochemical plants, regional workers and manufacturers (the release highlights use of Ontario steel and local labour).
  • Indigenous partners and communities (the province says it has begun duty-to-consult processes).
  • Potentially Manitoba and port interests if extensions (including study of a route to the Port of Churchill) move forward.

What’s next

  • Ontario will complete the feasibility study, define estimated costs and commercial models, and continue consultations. The announcement is a proposal; the pipeline and any Strategic Petroleum Reserve remain subject to study and further decisions.

Keywords

Related links

Source: Ontario Newsroom

Official release