Energy exports help economy bounce back with 3.5% growth in third quarter
OTTAWA — The Canadian economy slightly exceeded expectations in the third quarter to grow at its fastest pace in more than two years and rebound from a second-quarter contraction.
The country’s real gross domestic product expanded at an annual rate of 3.5 per cent with help from a strong performance in energy exports, Statistics Canada said Wednesday.
Experts had long predicted a bounce back from a second-quarter slump, which was largely due to oil-production shutdowns linked to May’s Alberta wildfires and scheduled maintenance at oilsands facilities. In that quarter, real GDP recoiled at an annual rate of 1.3 per cent — revised from an initial reading of a 1.6 per cent pull back.
But the latest quarterly number came in above predictions and many analysts were encouraged by the particularly sturdy growth of 0.3 per cent in September, the final month of the third quarter.


