To an extent. Quebec does receice equalization but at one of the lowest per capita ratios in Canada. PEI, NFLD receive much more per capita. And quebec has more industries than logging and maple syrup. Far more diversified than the Alberta econony actually. Not to badmouth Alberta, but the reason they are in the world of hurt they are in is largly because global oil prices are half what they were at their peak. Lack of pipeline is compounding the issue, but its hard to escape that fundamental fact that oil prices have dropped off from their 100 dollar a barrel high to the mid 50s now. And with US becoming a energy exporter from a energy importer, that is only going to add to the global glut Quebecs, and any future Alberta would simply take their federal portion of taxes(doubling taxes to make up for the portion no longer going to ottawa) to pay for their programs. But both would be screwed once dumped with their portion of the federal debt. I think albertas portion would be around 70 billion. And with the higher interest rate to pay it(Alberta being a far riskier jurisdiction to lend to as a independent country) simply playing the interests on it will be brutal. And if Alberta simply skips out on the bill, being sanctioned to high heaven will not be pleasant either. Any future for Alberta requires access to the sea, whether in Canada or out if it.
With the USA being a unreliable partner(keystone XL, Democrats, protectionism) and Canada not about to do Alberta any favors, being landlocked with even more hurdles to face getting oil to markets(No NAFTA, no WTO) Alberta will not have a good go. Not at all.
Again, Quebec has access to the sea, that's a huge plus. While locked out of the Canadian and American markets, Quebec could desperately look overseas for some respite. Alberta only has two options, Canada and the USA and if they don't pan out Alberta is screwed.