National Post

Encana ‘ not relocating our head office’ to Denver

CEO leaving Calgary for personal reasons ENERGY

- GEOFFREY MORGAN Financial Post gmorgan@ nationalpo­st. com

CALGARY • Encana Corp.’ s chief executive Doug Suttles is relocating from Calgary to Denver, but the company says there are no plans to move the headquarte­rs south of the border.

Suttles’ plans to move from Calgary, where Encana is headquarte­red, to its Denver office by the end of the spring — a move that has stoked fears in Calgary that the headquarte­rs could move too, given half of Encana’s capital is deployed in U.S. shale basins.

Concern about firms relocating out of Calgary has become more intense since tax reforms were i mplemented in the U. S., where many Canadian oil and gas producers such as Encana have large operations and a possible financial incentive to move.

But Encana spokespers­on Jay Averill said Suttles was leaving Calgary for personal reasons and that the executive already spends parts of his time working out of Encana’s 800-person Denver office.

He said the move is not a precursor to a larger, officewide relocation. Encana’s Calgary office is slightly larger than the Denver office, with close to 1,000 people working there.

“We’re not moving other staff and, no, we’re not relocating our head office,” Averill said Friday. “That’s a definitive ‘no’ on that.”

The company’s production, capital and staff are all “pretty evenly split” between the two cities and Suttles’ move would have little to no effect on the company’s dayto- day operations, Averill said.

The move, however, comes at a time when many domestic oil and gas companies are calling on the provincial and federal government­s to make the province more competitiv­e relative to the U.S ., where President Donald Trump has overhauled the tax system and eliminated regulation­s.

Amid those calls, speculatio­n about which Canadian companies could be enticed to move south is high.

Earlier this month, Ted Morton, a former minister of energy in Alberta, suggested in a Financial Post column that TransCanad­a Corp. is considerin­g a move to Houston.

But the pipeline company has denied it.

“Respect fully, it is TransCanad­a’s corporate policy not to speculate on rumours and speculatio­n and this would certainly fit those categories,” company spokespers­on Mark Cooper said of a potential move.

Suttles, hired in 2013, made $ 13 million in 2016, according to the company’s most recent management compensati­on disclosure.

This is not the first time an American-born executive at a Canadian oil and gas producer has decamped from Alberta to Colorado, which has a low income tax rate of 4.63 per cent and among the lowest sales tax rates in the U. S. at 2.9 per cent.

In 1997, Gulf Canada Resources Inc.’s CEO J.P. Bryan moved the company’s entire executive team and headquarte­rs from Calgary to Denver because, Bryan said, it would be easier to attract top talent in the U.S.

The move was short- lived as executives and the headquarte­rs were back in Calgary in 1999, by which time Dick Auchinleck had become CEO and was trying to un-do many of Bryan’s moves.

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