The Pacific Pivot: Canada’s Maritime Energy Awakening and the Global Trade Realignment
From Landlocked Monopsony to Indo-Pacific Lifeline: Infrastructure, Geopolitics, and the New Energy Calculus As of early 2026, Canada’s energy landscape has undergone a profound structural transformation, shifting from a captive supplier of the United States to a dynamic maritime exporter for the Indo-Pacific. The completion and optimization of the Trans Mountain pipeline, coupled with the operationalization of multiple LNG terminals on the West Coast, have shattered decades of infrastructure bottlenecks. This Pacific pivot has narrowed the historical price discount on Canadian crude, rerouted global shipping patterns, and forged a strategic energy corridor with India and other Asian economies seeking alternatives to volatile Middle Eastern chokepoints. While the United States grapples with the end of its energy monopsony, Canada leverages newfound autonomy to hedge against protectionism and diversify markets. Yet, this expansion is fraught with contradictions: narrowing discounts cl...