Timeline of the petroleum industry in Alberta


Below is a brief timeline covering the history of the petroleum industry Alberta and its predecessor states.
DateEventReference
1715Captain Swan reports finding "gum or pitch" in the region now known as the Athabasca oil sand. The Captain's report is the first known to mention the oil sands.
April 14, 1872Dominion Lands Act receives royal assent, granting mineral rights to settlers under certain conditions.
1874George Mercer Dawson files the first government report of the oil sands when surveying for the International Boundary Commission.
1902The Rocky Mountain Development Company drills the first oil producing well, Lineham Discovery Well No. 1, in Western Canada at Cameron Creek.
September 1, 1905The Alberta Act creates Alberta as a province from the North-West Territories. Resource rights are still held by the federal government.
1914Dingman No. 1 strikes oil starting an oil boom that subsides due to World War I.
April 17, 1915Public Utilities Board is created by the Alberta government as the provinces first organization partially responsible for energy resources. The organization later spawns the Petroleum and Natural Gas Conservation Board, then the Energy Utilities Board, and is then split into Energy Resources Conservation Board and Alberta Energy Regulator.
1925Construction on Bitumount, an experimental site dedicated to separating bitumen from the Athabasca oil sands, begins.
December 14, 1929Alberta Natural Resources Act passed, transferring control of natural resources and Crown land to Alberta.
1931Alberta government levies its first royalty, at five percent, on oil and gas production.
1939Shell opens exploration offices in Alberta.
February 13, 1947Leduc No. 1 strikes oil starting Alberta's post-World War II oil boom.
1947ATCO is incorporated.
June 1948Calgary Petroleum Club founded.
April 30, 1949Enbridge incorporated by Imperial Oil as the Interprovincial Pipe Line Company.
1950Interprovincial Pipeline constructed as the first large pipeline to carry Alberta oil.
1951Alberta government announces the plant at Bitumount was able to separate bitumen from the oil sands profitably, following the research of Karl Clark.
March 21, 1951TC Energy incorporated by Special Act of Parliament as Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Limited.
1953Husky Energy incorporated in Canada after splitting off from American counterpart
February 23, 1953Pembina No. 1 is drilled marking the first use of fracking in Alberta.
October 17, 1953Trans Mountain Pipeline enters use as the first pipeline to carry Alberta oil to the Pacific.
November 1959National Energy Board created to organize interprovincial energy infrastructure.
1965Rainbow Lake oil field discovered by Banff Oil Company.
19731973 Oil Crisis begins precipitated by Western involvement in the Yom Kippur War causes OPEC to embargo many Western countries, increasing the price and thus competitiveness of Alberta oil.
October 22, 1979Nova Chemicals opens the first ethylene plant in Alberta to be used in plastic production.
October 28, 1980National Energy Program is announced by the federal government, creating anger and resentment in the West and set to take effect on January 1, 1981.
June 1, 1985Western Accord takes effect, ending the National Energy Program.
April 1, 1994AltaGas begins operations in Calgary.
2001Cenovus Energy pilots the first use of the SAGD system, technology developed by the Alberta Crown corp, the Alberta Oil Sands Technology and Research Authority at its Foster Creek location.
September 29, 2004Imperial Oil announces headquarters move from Toronto to Calgary.
May 29, 2018Trans Mountain Pipeline announced to be bought by federal government after the pipelines expansion faced ongoing regulatory delays for five years.
June 21, 2019Canadian Energy Regulator Act receives royal assent, creating the Canadian Energy Regulator to replace the National Energy Board.
February 6, 2020
2020 Canadian pipeline and railway protests being as members of the Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte First Nation blockade a Canadian National Railway rail line just north of Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory.