Nate Horner shakes hands with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith after a swearing-in ceremony in Edmonton, Monday, Oct. 24, 2022. The Alberta government says it ended the 2022-23 budget year with a petro-powered $11.6 billion surplus, up from its third-quarter estimate of $10.4 billion. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

CP NewsAlert: Alberta ends 2022-23 with petro-powered $11.6B surplus

The Alberta government says it ended the 2022-23 budget year with a petro-powered $11.6 billion surplus, up from its third-quarter estimate of $10.4 billion.

Finance Minister Nate Horner says it’s a positive report.

The province says its strong financial situation allowed it to pay down $13.3 billion in debt.

It also saw the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund grow by $2.5 billion to $21.2 billion.

Revenues came in at $76.1 billion, which is $13.5 billion more than expected, due to non-renewable resource and tax revenues.

The government spent $64.5 billion, which was $2.4 billion more than budgeted, on higher-than-expected health-care costs and affordability measures to help Albertans deal with inflation.

More Coming.

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