Calgary Herald

Pipelines inch forward, one obstacle at a time

- CHRIS VARCOE Chris Varcoe is a Calgary Herald columnist. cvarcoe@postmedia.com

Building oil pipelines in Canada has been compared to a game of Snakes and Ladders, where one roll of the dice could propel a project ahead or push it back several steps.

In reality, it’s more like the popular video game Fortnite: players leap out of a plane on blind faith, with a parachute and big intentions to start building on the land below.

Then, the battle really begins to see who’s left standing. (Ask a teenager if you need more details.)

Ok, it’s a bit of an exaggerati­on to equate the country’s pipeline quest to a virtual Battle Royale, but it seems with every step forward, another fight lurks around the corner.

On Thursday, some good news arrived for proponents who want to see the Trans Mountain expansion and Enbridge’s Line 3 replacemen­t project built.

However, another bump emerged in the United States for Keystone XL that potentiall­y could add months to the timeline of TransCanad­a’s $8-billion energy project.

It’s enough to make Albertans want to stand up and scream, as the province watches billions of dollars in foregone oilpatch revenue and government royalties frittered away annually.

Alberta Energy Minister Marg McCuaig-Boyd wasn’t disappoint­ed by the latest issue facing Keystone XL, but philosophi­cal about the circuitous route ahead.

“I am learning that as you start to move forward, sometime there is an obstacle here and there,” she said. “I honestly feel we are closer than ever to getting these pipelines built and getting top dollar for our resources.”

Optimism is a necessary commodity in the face of new problems hampering Canada from getting its oil to customers in the most efficient way possible.

With pipelines full and space being rationed to shippers, record amounts of crude are now being exported by rail, driving up costs for producers.

The price differenti­al between benchmark West Texas Intermedia­te crude and Western Canadian heavy oil has been widening this summer.

On Friday, the price discount stood at US$29 a barrel and analysts expect it will remain rangebound for the next two months as BP’s Whiting refinery — the largest consumer of Canadian heavy oil in the U.S. Midwest — undergoes maintenanc­e.

“The differenti­al could hover at $25 to $28 (a barrel) over the next few months — even that might be optimistic — but it is definitely going to stay wider than what we thought,” said analyst Martin King of GMP FirstEnerg­y.

Against this backdrop, the three main projects that could unlock the bottleneck — Keystone XL, Line 3 and the Trans Mountain expansion — slowly chug ahead.

TransMount­ain received a green light Thursday from the National Energy Board to start constructi­on on key segments of the pipeline’s expansion, which is designed to almost triple the amount of oil moving from Alberta to the Pacific coast.

The NEB’s announceme­nt will allow work to begin from the Edmonton area to a region north of Kamloops.

Meanwhile, constructi­on on Enbridge’s Line 3 replacemen­t project began in Saskatchew­an and Manitoba earlier this month. Company officials expect the project will be operating in the second half of next year, making it the nearest project to completion.

However, Keystone XL faced another impediment this week.

A Montana federal judge ordered the U.S. State Department to perform an environmen­tal review of the line’s revised route through Nebraska — a path approved by that state’s Public Service Commission.

The decision could be appealed, or the judge might accept a draft review released last month completed for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.

TransCanad­a said Friday it

is examining the decision, but doesn’t anticipate the ruling will affect constructi­on-preparatio­n work it’s now doing.

A final investment decision on Keystone XL hasn’t been made, although the company has been gearing up to position itself for constructi­on in 2019.

Retired TransCanad­a executive Dennis McConaghy said the latest U.S. court ruling has the potential to delay the developmen­t, although likely not for long.

“It adds more risk and uncertaint­y, but … TransCanad­a hasn’t given an indication this is this straw that’s broken their back on the project. They are going to persevere,” he said.

Perseveran­ce is another necessary element for pipeline proponents, given the sheer number of twists and turns facing proposed energy infrastruc­ture.

In the spring of 2017, a report by energy consultanc­y IHS Markit pointed out the average major Canadian pipeline proposal had taken five years to move through various regulatory hoops. Flash forward 16 months. The big three developmen­ts have all made progress, navigating through regulatory and judicial challenges and winning key government approvals. But a warning by IHS that rail would be needed to get oil moving out of Western Canada has come to pass as the clock has kept ticking.

“There is increased scrutiny on every little step” in the process, said Kevin Birn, IHS Markit’s director of Canadian oilsands.

“The reasons there is so much scrutiny is there’s so much at stake.”

It’s taken a lot of time, effort and money for all three developmen­ts to get within striking distance of the finish line. All three will eventually be needed if Canada wants to significan­tly increase its oilsands output in the next decade.

However, the lesson from this week is each project will continue to face committed opponents and potential hurdles that could sidetrack new oil and gas infrastruc­ture.

“Every one of these projects can have new setbacks in the courts and every day is a new test of the resolve of authoritie­s to enforce it,” added McConaghy.

“We should expect each will be progressed, but they all face — because it’s a sign of our times — potential setbacks.”

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