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  1. Since 2010, Canada’s crude oil production has increased 57%. Canadian production is centered in western Canada, which accounted for about 95% of total production in 2020. The remaining 5% was produced mostly in Newfoundland and Labrador. Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Newfoundland produce 96% of Canada’s oil.

  2. These four interactive dashboards explore hydrocarbon production (crude oil and natural gas), electricity generation, energy end-use demand, and greenhouse gas emissions for each province and territory.

  3. As of 2021, household heating oil consumption in Newfoundland and Labrador was 64.7 gigajoules per household that accounts for 17.62% of Canada's household heating oil consumption. The top 5 regions (others are New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Quebec, and Ontario) account for 84.23% of it.

  4. Jun 18, 2024 · To be eligible, you must be heating your home with oil, sign up to the OHPA program and get pre-approved with your provincial or territorial program for an eligible heat pump system.

  5. Jan 13, 2023 · Just over half of Canadian households that reported having a primary heating system in 2021 had a forced air furnace (51%), while one-quarter had electric baseboard heaters (25%). Less than 1 in 10 households were heated with a boiler with hot water or steam radiators (8%) or a heat pump (6%).

  6. How Canadians use energy varies as much as how Canadians produce it. Refined petroleum products (RPPs), such as gasoline, diesel, and heating oil, are the largest form of energy consumed by Canadians. After RPPs, however, the types and quantities of fuels consumed vary greatly.

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  8. Nov 3, 2023 · On average in Canada, a home that heats with oil will use 1,350 litres over a heating season. In Atlantic Canada, the average consumption can be up to 1,500 litres. Oil-heated homes in Canada can expect to spend $2,100 to $3,000 per year on heating fuel, not including the cost of the fuel charge on light fuel oil used for heating.