Alberta officials have started the process to create an open market for online gambling, potentially following the lead of fellow Canadian province Ontario into the space.
Dale Nally, the province's minister of Service Alberta and Red Tape Reduction, traveled to the ICE convention in London last week to further research the issue and speak with stakeholders.
Nally received a mandate letter from Alberta Premier Danielle Smith last July that, among other issues, included 鈥渨orking with Indigenous partners, finish developing and implementing Alberta鈥檚 online gaming strategy with a focus on responsible gaming and provincial and Indigenous revenue generation.鈥
鈥淚f you like Ontario, you鈥檙e going to like Alberta,鈥 Nally told ICE delegates, adding that although the two provinces are similar in many ways, Alberta has lower tax rates and, as a result, citizens have higher disposable incomes.
鈥淢any of you should be asking the question, why are we not in Alberta right now?鈥 Nally said. 鈥淲ell, that鈥檚 because we haven鈥檛 done a good enough job and Ontario has, but the fact is we鈥檙e here and we鈥檙e looking at what Ontario has done.
鈥淲e鈥檙e kicking the tires, and we know that we need to get to a place with an open free market for iGaming.鈥
Paul Burns, president of the Canadian Gaming Association, was optimistic about the developments to date and what they mean for the future.
鈥淚 think [Nally] came away with a clear understanding of what he had heard and where they are going to be and the work they are going to do,鈥 Burns told 91天堂原創 GamblingCompliance.
鈥淭he next step is more digging in and further consultation with industry and making deliberations on a series of policy questions they鈥檙e working on.
"The intention is there. I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 an if; it鈥檚 a when,鈥 Burns added. 鈥淭he statements from the government over the summer were pretty clear, so they鈥檙e getting to work, which is great.鈥
The question for many potential stakeholders will be how closely an Alberta model follows the Ontario open market format, which launched in April 2022.
鈥淥bviously, the closer they are to Ontario standards, the better it is for the industry to be able to enter the market,鈥 Burns said. 鈥淚 think that was something [Nally] heard and I think he鈥檚 recognized he鈥檚 heard that.鈥
Ontario鈥檚 process of launching its competitive market took roughly three years from the government announcing its plans to operators going live.
Burns said that although having the Ontario model to learn from may help, the Alberta process will not be an overnight one either.
鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 expect this to take years, but it鈥檚 going to take a while,鈥 he said.
The province had previously dipped its toes into the water of a more inclusive sports-betting market, with Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis (AGLC) issuing a request for proposals in 2021 to select two private operators to offer sports betting in the province.
However, the AGLC never selected a winning bidder, and the process largely stalled out until Smith鈥檚 mandate letter in July.
In addition to AGLC鈥檚 PlayAlberta online offering, the province has a host of operators that do business in what is considered a 鈥済rey鈥 market, making one of the key issues for Alberta officials to decide being whether they will allow a free transition into the regulated space for the grey market operators similar to Ontario.聽
Additional reporting by Joe Ewens.


