Medicine Hat News

TransCanad­a going ahead with NGTL expansion

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TransCanad­a Corp. is investing $2.4 billion to expand its NGTL natural gas system in Western Canada as growing production in the region has filled existing capacity and battered prices.

The company said Thursday that the decision to expand NGTL comes after it recently completed an oversubscr­ibed open season, with shippers committing to one billion cubic feet per day of expansion capacity for an average of almost 29 years.

“The successful open season shows strong industry support to significan­tly expand transmissi­on capacity out of the basin and improve market connectivi­ty for Canadian natural gas production,” said company chief executive Russ Girling in a statement.

The NGTL system is a dense web of pipeline that covers much of Alberta and runs into northeaste­rn B.C., acting as a gathering system for producers in some of the richest natural gas basins on the continent.

Producers in the region have, however, been victims of their own success in unlocking the shale gas in areas like the Montney and Deep Basin, as pipeline constraint­s and lack of demand in some markets have hit prices that have even strayed into negative territory.

“If you imagine Alberta today as a sink and the tap’s on, right now the sink is filling up faster than it can drain,” said Brook Papau, managing director of RS Energy Group.

Traditiona­l export routes to California and the U.S. Midwest, as well as using the gas in province, are full-up, said Papau, leaving producers to look to Eastern Canada to find better prices.

TransCanad­a said its investment in the NGTL system will help link more production to its Mainline system that runs to Ontario and which still has significan­t untapped capacity.

The expansion program will include approximat­ely 375 kilometres of large diameter pipeline, compressio­n facilities, meter stations and other associated facilities.

The company has already alleviated some pressure in the region after reaching long-term fixed price agreements last year with shippers on its Mainline, and said Thursday it continues to look at the potential of further expanding natural gas shipping on the pipeline.

“We continue to work diligently with industry to facilitate economic access for their natural gas to key export markets, including access to Eastern Canada and the U.S. Northeast through TransCanad­a’s Canadian Mainline and downstream systems,” said Girling.

TransCanad­a would have to invest some capital to restore the extra capacity in the Mainline, but another open season on the pipeline would be well-received, said energy analyst Ed Kallio, principal at Eau Claire Energy Advisory, Inc.

“I have no doubt that if they do an open season it will be very highly subscribed.”

Producers have been scrambling to find alternativ­es after West Coast liquefied natural gas projects have failed to emerge, said Kallio, while producers haven’t cut back on production because the shale formations are also yielding valuable liquids used to dilute thick bitumen.

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