National Post

Investors eyeing Shell for LNG clues

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

CALGARY • Oil and gas investors will be watching Royal Dutch Shell PLC’s

second-quarter earnings day on Thursday for signals from the British-Dutch super major on plans for its $40 billion LNG Canada project on the West Coast.

It is “a potentiall­y pivotal date in the evolution of the Canadian natural gas market,” Martin King, GMP FirstEnerg­y director of institutio­nal research, said in a research note this week.

“There is no guarantee that (Shell) will make this announceme­nt on this date, but the hints coming from the project consortium in 2018, along with developmen­ts last week hinting at an important announceme­nt this week, all seem to suggest that the (Shell) earnings release might be the platform for the project’s sanctionin­g,” King said.

A series of events in recent weeks have led analysts to anticipate that Shell, along with joint-venture partners Petroliam Nasional Berhad (Petronas), PetroChina Company Ltd. , Korea Gas Corporatio­n and Mitsubishi Corp., will make a decision on a project that would greatly help beleaguere­d domestic gas producers.

Last week, oilfield services company Black Diamond Group Ltd. announced it had been awarded contracts to build a workforce camp for the pipeline that would feed natural gas to the LNG project.

LNG Canada also launched a Twitter account last week. As of Thursday, it contains no news of a project announceme­nt but hundreds of followers as interest in LNG Canada intensifie­s — especially following the cancellati­ons of Petronas’ Pacific NorthWest LNG and

CNOOC Ltd.’s Aurora LNG last year.

There are more positive signs in the coming days, leading to yet more speculatio­n.

Shell’s global upstream director Andrew Brown is scheduled to be in Kitimat on Friday for a road show following the company’s earnings release, LNG Canada director of external relations Susannah Pierce said in an email.

“It sounds like they’re bringing out the big guns,” GMP FirstEnerg­y’s King said by phone.

And next week, Shell has engaged investment bankers at Royal Bank of Canada to do marketing in Toronto on Aug. 1 and Aug. 2, Raymond James analyst Jeremy McCrea said.

“There’s no reason why Shell Canada would go marketing,” McCrea said, adding that such events in Toronto are more common for smaller Canadian producers — not global super majors.

RBC did not respond to a request for comment.

Earlier this year, Shell changed the title of its top executive in Canada, Michael Crothers, from executive vicepresid­ent, oilsands to vicepresid­ent, Canada integrated gas. Shell sold its oilsands assets to Canadian Natural

Resources Ltd. last year. The LNG project would, for the first time, allow Canada to export its bountiful natural gas production to countries other than the U.S., GMP FirstEnerg­y’s King said.

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