Calgary Herald

ATCO to seek rate hike for fire losses

‘Negligible’ cost expected on individual bills

- REID SOUTHWICK rsouthwick@postmedia.com

ATCO Ltd. said Wednesday it would attempt to recover less than $10 million in losses it suffered from the Fort McMurray wildfires through rate increases.

The Calgary-based company said it responded rapidly to the May wildfires, deploying workers to provide accommodat­ion for first responders and evacuees, and repairing power equipment hit by flames.

ATCO said in its second-quarter earnings report that it was able to recoup some of its repair costs through insurance, but not for damages to wires, poles, towers and small natural gas pipelines.

The book value of the uninsured damaged assets is less than $10 million.

We will make an applicatio­n to the regulator to recover those costs ... (The planned increase is a) very small number.

“We will make an applicatio­n to the regulator to recover those costs,” said Brian Bale, senior vicepresid­ent and chief financial officer.

Bale said the cost, spread across its customer base, would be “extremely negligible” on individual bills.

“It’s a very small number,” he said.

ATCO posted $81 million in earnings for the second quarter, a boost in excess of 40 per cent over the same period last year.

The company said the jump was largely due to the growth in its utilities customers, higher demand for its portable worker housing and cost-cutting across the organizati­on.

The company noted its earnings in the second quarter of 2015 were unusually low due to one-time regulatory costs incurred in Australia, which made its 2016 earnings appear higher.

“We believe that the better-thanexpect­ed earnings are a slight positive for sentiment,” Robert Kwan, analyst at RBC Dominion Securities Inc., said in a note.

ATCO cut its capital spending to $387 million in the second quarter, down by $31 million or roughly seven per cent over the same period in 2015.

The company said the decline in spending was due in part to the completion last year of a major electricit­y transmissi­on line from Brooks to Edmonton.

“We’re seeing a tapering off of capital expenditur­e this year, mostly in electricit­y transmissi­on, compared to what we had in 2015,” Bale said.

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