Calgary Herald

Pipeline executive Monaco takes top spot

Calgary CEOS ranked on 2019 compensati­on

- AMANDA STEPHENSON astephenso­n@postmedia.com

We’re really proud of the results that were delivered under Mr. Monaco’s leadership in 2019.

— Marc Weil, Enbridge’s chief human resources officer

Enbridge CEO Al Monaco earned nearly $18 million in 2019, a sum that lands him at the top of the list of Calgary’s highest-paid executives.

The pipeline boss’s 45.6-percent year-over-year increase in total reported earnings vaulted him from sixth place in 2018 to first place in Postmedia’s annual survey of executive compensati­on, beating out other well-paid business leaders — including Canadian Pacific Railway CEO Keith Creel and telecommun­ications head Brad Shaw — who have taken the prize for top earnings in past years.

About half of Monaco’s significan­t increase in compensati­on was due in part to an increase in pension value, which represents longterm post-retirement compensati­on, said Enbridge’s chief human resources officer Marc Weil. The remainder was in the form of the granting of long-term incentives, which will be paid out in the future only if the company meets certain performanc­e targets.

“The majority of our CEO’S compensati­on is performanc­e-based ... which essentiall­y means we need to deliver and perform at or above expectatio­n to pay out that compensati­on overall,” Weil said in an interview. “It’s not what we would call day-to-day compensati­on.”

Weil added Enbridge had a successful 2019, selling assets and deleveragi­ng its balance sheet while still growing the business and executing its capital program.

“We’re really proud of the results that were delivered under Mr. Monaco’s leadership in 2019,” Weil said. “From a financial perspectiv­e alone, we delivered over $9.2 billion of distributa­ble cash flow, which was a significan­t increase from 2018, which was just around $1.6 billion.”

Enbridge also had the highest paid executive team in 2019, with occupants of its C-suite earning a collective $39.1 million.

The second-highest paid CEO on Calgary’s list in 2019 was Doug Suttles of oil and gas producer Ovintiv Inc. (Formerly Encana, the firm moved its corporate domicile from Calgary to Denver in January 2020, but was still included on Postmedia’s list of Calgary-headquarte­red companies for 2019.)

Suttles — who was also No. 2 on the list in 2018 — earned $16.7 million in 2019, up from $15.3 million the year before, in spite of the fact that total shareholde­r returns delivered by Ovintiv declined nearly 22 per cent year-over-year.

That’s a red flag, said Arden Dalik, senior partner with Global Governance Advisors, which conducts Postmedia’s compensati­on survey. Shareholde­rs want executive pay to be aligned with success, and will kick up a fuss if CEO compensati­on increases while share prices are declining, she said.

“If I was on that compensati­on committee, I would really be getting ready to defend what I’d done, because it looks like a misstep,” Dalik said of Ovintiv.

Ovintiv spokeswoma­n Cindy

Hassler said the vast majority of Suttles’ compensati­on consists of performanc­e-based long-term incentives such as stock options that will not be paid out if the firm doesn’t meet its goals. Hassler acknowledg­ed Ovintiv’s stock price has underperfo­rmed and said as a result, Suttles has only realized around 60 per cent of his reported pay since becoming CEO in 2013.

However, Hassler said in spite of the negative stock performanc­e, Ovintiv’s overall financial and operationa­l performanc­e has been strong and the board firmly believes in the appropriat­eness of Suttles’ realized compensati­on.

“It is clear our shareholde­rs agree with our compensati­on philosophy as they approved with almost 90 per cent voting in support,” Hassler said in an email.

Coming in third on Postmedia’s list for 2019 is Keith Creel, CEO of CP Rail, who took in $15.2 million. Company spokeswoma­n Salem Woodrow said in an email that CP generated a total shareholde­r return of 38 per cent in 2019, outperform­ing its competitor peer group.

“In the three years Mr. Creel has been president and CEO, CP has generated a total shareholde­r return of 78 per cent,” Woodrow said. “Under his leadership, 2019 was another record-setting year by most financial performanc­e measures.”

Russ Girling of TC Energy Corp. was the fourth-highest paid CEO in 2019, earning $13.4 million, while Shaw Communicat­ions CEO Brad Shaw landed in fifth place with $12 million in 2019.

In sixth place was Suncor Energy’s Mark Little, who earned $11.7 million, and in seventh place was Cenovus Energy’s Alex Pourbaix, whose reported compensati­on increased nearly 38 per cent yearover-year to $9.0 million — a jump that helped him crack the top 10.

“In 2019 Cenovus’s performanc­e was strong, including one-year total shareholde­r return of 40 per cent,” company spokeswoma­n Sonja Franklin said in an email. “Alex Pourbaix’s strong leadership contribute­d directly to these results.”

Rounding out the eighth, ninth and 10th spots on the list were Tim Mckay of Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. ($8.2 million); Rich Kruger of Imperial Oil Ltd. ($8.1 million) and Michael Dilger of Pembina Pipeline Corp. ($8.0 million). The highest-paid female executive in Calgary in 2019 was Transalta Corp. CEO Dawn Farrell, who earned $6.8 million.

Postmedia’s executive compensati­on data for 2019 was collected before COVID-19 and the global oil price crash. Since then, many of the executives on the list have announced they will take voluntary salary cuts.

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