Fort McMurray was a very different place when Fedhasa Mikael Hundessa moved there in 2007.

At the time, the northern Alberta town— the epicentre of Canada's oil sands industry — was booming, and rising prices had pushed crude oil to around US$85 per barrel.

It was a risky move for Hundessa, but at the time he had nothing to lose: the Ethiopian national, a refugee of the country's pro-democracy movement, was struggling to make ends meet in Winnipeg as a student with a part-time job earning $8 per hour.

Then one day on his lunch break, he happened to glance at a newspaper, and saw the advertisement that would change his life.

“The ad said this place called Fort McMurray was looking for manpower,” he said. “They said skilled workers, especially power engineers, could make up to $30 an hour. I had never heard of so much money!"

The next day, he did a little bit of research on power engineering. "I also did a bit of research to find out where Fort McMurray was," he said.

A turn of the tides

Life was good for a few years — Hundessa landed a heavy machinery job with Syncrude in the oil fields north of Fort McMurray and could afford the mortgage payments on his house. He even registered for a heavy duty mechanics course at local Keyano College, which landed him his current job with Shell Canada.

Things took a turn for the worse in August however, when North American oil prices dropped to their lowest level in nearly seven years. After hitting a peak of over US$100 per barrel in 2013, prices slumped to US$42 per barrel.

“The price of oil is very volatile and no one knows how much worse it will get,” he said. “Right now I think I am okay, but I don’t know about tomorrow.”

Today, Hundessa considers himself lucky to have a job — he knows plenty of people who have been laid off and spends nights worried about waking up to a similar fate. He reassures his wife and kids that his job is secure, but he isn't able to convince himself.

“It’s very scary, because you have a big mortgage,” he explained. “So if they lay you off, where will you find that money? How can you provide for your family? If you live in a big city at least you have lots of options to survive, but in Fort McMurray, you are relying on the oil companies.”

I asked him if he would leave Fort McMurray if he were let go at work. He shook his head.

“We came from somewhere else and we don’t have anybody in Canada, or any other place we are connected to,” said Hundessa. “So whatever happens, this is our home.”

An unfortunate reliance on oil patch dollars

Canada's oil is a 'natural resource,' but there’s nothing 'natural' about the methods used to extract it.

Mining muskeg and separating sand from oil, a process that’s been called “the largest industrial project on earth,” has spawned unprecedented concern about the environmental impacts of industry, and has polarized opinions across the country.

Unfortunately, oil sands dollars, which have been powering the Canadian economy since 2005, are quickly disappearing.

“The longer this goes on, the longer it’s going to take to recover,” Gary Leach, president of the Explorers and Producers Association of Canada, told the Financial Post in September as oil prices dipped below $40 per barrel.

He said oil and gas companies were moving into a "survivor mode," and that the mood in Alberta was that of a "boxer taking too many hits."

Suncor Oil Sands - Andy Wright
Photo of oil sands by Andrew S. Wright

For years, oil companies have paid royalties, bankrolled rental offices, remitted municipal property taxes, subsidized non-profits and made tax-deductible donations to support Canadian schools, hospitals and recreation centres.

Like it or not, the Canadian economy has come to rely on 'the oil patch,' as evidenced by comments from the office of Alberta Finance Minister Joe Ceci as the province faced a deficit of $5.4 billion in August:

“Alberta is not immune to the economic challenges around the world and we continue to monitor the situation closely,” said his press secretary Marion Nader in a statement. “The government is focused on diversifying the economy by investing in infrastructure and building on our strengths and expertise in the oil and gas sector. We’re also focused on opening new markets for our products."

The steep drop in oil prices has since sent shockwaves across the country and in late September The Globe and Mail reported that Morgan Stanley had downgraded its assessment of the energy industry, reasoning that the oversupply of oil may not improve, and implying that investors should look elsewhere.

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