Edmonton Journal

Oilpatch divided over Mainline’s proposed shipping contracts

Enbridge’s pipeline plan leaves just 10 per cent spot space each month

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

CALGARY Canadian oil companies are worried that a new, “alarming” change to the way the country’s largest pipeline network operates will make it more difficult for them to secure space in an already-scarce system.

The Mainline system, operated by Enbridge Inc., is Canada’s largest and most important oil export system, carrying 2.85 million barrels of oil per day through a network of multiple pipes to markets in the U.S. Midwest. That’s about 70 per cent of all oil pipeline capacity out of Western Canada.

For the past 70 years, the Mainline has operated as a 100 per cent “common carrier” system, which means producers or refiners can ask for space on the pipelines a month in advance without the need to sign a long-term contract. But now, Enbridge is proposing a major change to the system by launching an open season to contract 90 per cent of the space on the lines on a long-term basis, leaving just 10 per cent for spot shippers each month.

In a July 23 letter sent to the National Energy Board and obtained by the Financial Post, Explorers and Producers Associatio­n of Canada president Tristan Goodman said he’s “concerned with proposed changes” to the Mainline pipeline network. He said the changes would pose “risks of material harm to Canadian producers including EPAC members, Canadian and provincial government­s and the citizens of the western provinces are significan­t and overshadow any perceived benefits.”

Calgary-based Enbridge releases its second quarter results Friday and many in the oilpatch believe it will announce the open season for contracts then.

For its part, Enbridge said it has been working to address concerns about the existing process and the new contracted system for both producers and refiners.

“Enbridge has spent more than a year engaging with industry to develop a range of service offerings that provide both term and volume flexibilit­y to meet the needs of all market participan­ts, large and small,” spokespers­on Jesse Semko said in an email.

Still, with new pipeline projects having stalled, producers are nervous about changes to the strained system.

“Enbridge’s proposed change to contract carriage puts shippers, especially upstream Canadian producers, in the difficult position of being forced into participat­ing in the open season when pipeline capacity is in short supply and future expansions are uncertain,” Goodman wrote in the letter to the NEB.

The change has also divided larger Canadian producers with integrated companies supporting the change and companies without refining assets raising concerns about the proposal.

“We have to be really careful here on this firm capacity and whether it’s something we should even be doing. I know Enbridge wants to do it and I know the refiners in the Midwest really want it and the marketers really want it,” Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. executive vice-chairman Steve Laut said on a podcast this month hosted by ARC Energy Research Institute.

“We have to be careful we don’t shift all the market power to the buyers and not the producers,” he said, though he gave Enbridge credit for trying to design a system that smaller producers could participat­e in.

Small producers have been particular­ly nervous about signing up for long-term agreements on the pipeline network.

“Several contract provisions specifical­ly address interest from small producers. Credit requiremen­ts are substantia­lly reduced relative to a typical take-or-pay contracts,” Enbridge’s Semko said.

“The minimum Mainline open season volume commitment will be 2,200 barrels per day, which represents one standard batch per month,” he said, referring to small volume commitment­s that should allow junior and intermedia­te producers to participat­e.

Jackie Forrest, ARC Energy Research Institute’s senior director of research, said the changes to the Mainline would mean the amount of space available to the spot market would fall to 15 per cent from 79 per cent of all available pipeline space out of Western Canada.

She also noted the Colonial Pipeline in the U.S. attempted to move from a common carrier to a contracted system in 2014 but was denied by the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission because the pipeline company didn’t attempt to expand the system.

Enbridge will need approvals from the NEB to make the switch.

Cenovus Energy Inc., which has stakes in U.S. refineries through joint-venture partnershi­ps, said the change would help expand markets for Canadian oil.

“The industry is working through the process to ensure we have a level playing field for everyone,” Cenovus spokespers­on Ruth Anne Beck said in an email. “However, without changes to the current process, apportionm­ent risk continues to be something we will have to manage.”

Apportionm­ent — the need to limit access to the Mainline — has been at the heart of the fight over the system for months, since Canadian oil production surpassed the country’s total pipeline export capacity in the middle of 2018.

 ?? DALE G YOUNG/DETROIT NEWS VIA AP, FILE ?? Enbridge is proposing a major change to the Mainline system by launching an open season to contract 90 per cent of the space on the pipelines on a long-term basis.
DALE G YOUNG/DETROIT NEWS VIA AP, FILE Enbridge is proposing a major change to the Mainline system by launching an open season to contract 90 per cent of the space on the pipelines on a long-term basis.

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