Canada's Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson says there is agreement about moving away from Russian oil and gas. Photo credit © BBC
Canada says it can provide more oil, gas, and uranium to help solve the global energy crisis.
Prices have soared as a result of Russian supplies being squeezed because of its invasion of Ukraine.
Canada's natural resources minister says many countries are committed "to help as much as we can in terms of displacing Russian oil and gas".
The world's fourth-biggest oil producer has committed to exporting an extra 200,000 barrels of oil.
It's Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson told BBC News it would also export an additional 100,000 barrels of natural gas.
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It follows requests from its allies at a meeting of the world's energy ministers at the International Energy Agency (IEA) in Paris, which pledged to accelerate the move to clean energy.
"We expect that by the end of the year we will be fully up to the 300,000 barrels," says Mr Wilkinson.
However, that is only a fraction of the three million barrels a day that the IEA says will be removed from global markets by next month because of sanctions against Russia.
Canada is limited in how much oil it can export because its pipelines are running near full capacity, but Mr. Wilkinson says sending it via the United States is an option.
Canada's biggest pipeline company Enbridge told the BBC it is "prepared to do what we can to increase energy security for both North America and Europe".
The impact of Canada's extra supplies "will be relatively limited given the regionality of Canadian crude, which will likely stay in the North American market" according to Louise Dickson, who is a senior oil analyst at the consultancy Rystad Energy.
"The main energy crisis is playing out in Europe due to supply shortages, and Asia where demand is on the cusp of recovering if Covid-19 lockdowns can be kept at bay," adds Ms Dickson.
Tackling rising prices
Canada has joined the US and UK in introducing a ban on Russian oil. That has seen prices pushed up as high as almost $130 (£98.56) a barrel since the war in Ukraine began.
Mr Wilkinson believes "there is a consensus" among the other energy ministers at the meeting that the world needs to cope without Russian oil and gas, adding: "I think the only differences are around how fast can you actually get away from it."
However the investment bank JP Morgan says it thinks the "current extreme aversion to Russian oil will subside" and that the price of a barrel of oil will fall back to about $100 in the second half of this year.
The International Monetary Fund is among those who have raised concerns that higher oil prices are causing costs of goods and energy bills to rise and that inflation is harming the global economy.
Mr Wilkinson says leaders must ensure that people "are able to heat their homes and that industries are able to produce the goods that we all need."
In the longer term, Mr Wilkinson recognizes that "energy security and fighting climate change are intimately linked".
Addressing immediate concerns, he argues: "Canadian oil displacing Russian oil doesn't cause more climate change. There's no more CO2 emissions."
Having previously run a "clean energy" company, Mr Wilkinson says he is a big believer in using hydrogen and other renewable sources to create more energy going forward.
Growth of nuclear
The variable nature of solar and wind power means "there is a role for nuclear in many jurisdictions in terms of providing baseload rather than intermittent power", Mr Wilkinson says.
Russia plays a key role in the global nuclear power industry. As well as mining uranium, it does a lot of the processing to make it useable in power stations.
Canada is "absolutely" prepared to export more uranium, says Mr Wilkinson. He explains "our uranium producers actually do have excess capacity and certainly could ramp up to to help to fill the gap that Russian supplies will provide".
The UN Secretary-General didn't mention a role for nuclear power when he said a few days ago that the rush to use fossil fuels because of the war in Ukraine is "madness" and threatens the ability to limit the rise in global temperatures to 1.5C.
Mr Wilkinson says: "I think where the Secretary-General and I would agree very much...is the need to accelerate the work that we're doing on climate change.
"We are we are running out of time. There is no question about that - we need to make significant progress by 2030."
He suggests that the war in Ukraine is underlining "how important it is not just from a climate perspective, although that's enough, it's from an energy security perspective that we actually do this now. We don't wait."
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