National Post

FINANCIAL POST

PIPELINE GIANTS SHEDDING RENEWABLE ENERGY ASSETS.

- Jesse snyder

OTTAWA • Canada’s pipeline giants are gradually trimming their stakes in renewable energy assets, reversing a bullish trend among midstream operators amid soaring valuations for clean energy developmen­ts. On Thursday, TransCanad­a Corp. announced it would sell its Cartier wind facilities in Quebec to Innergex Renewable Energy Inc. for $630 million. With the $540 million sale of several solar facilities in October, TransCanad­a now has disposed of all of its wind and solar portfolio.

TransCanad­a and rival Enbridge Inc. have been reducing their stakes in various renewable energy developmen­ts in recent months to reduce their debt load, taking advantage of private equity firms and pension funds rising interest in the sector.

Chris Cox, analyst with Raymond James in Calgary, said the sales reflect rising valuations for renewables as more investors seek out steadier returns.

“Nothing has changed except that the market for assets inherently fluctuate,” he said. “It was a less competitiv­e market—it’s now gotten a lot more competitiv­e.”

Enbridge, for its part, divested a 49 per cent stake in renewable energy assets in North America and offshore wind farms in Germany for $1.75 billion in May, as part of a joint venture with the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board. Enbridge still retains interest in 2,500MW of zero-emissions power projects, and is one of Canada’s largest investors in clean energy.

One month later, energy infrastruc­ture company AltaGas Ltd. sold its 35 per cent interest in three hydro projects in B.C. to a joint venture owned by Axium Infrastruc­ture Inc. and Manulife Financial Corp. for $922 million.

Analysts say Enbridge and TransCanad­a have been selling billions of dollars of assets following two blockbuste­r acquisitio­ns in recent years that have swelled their debt profiles. At the same

time, the entrance of new investors into the market in recent years has offered lucrative returns for the midstream companies.

“Most recently the trend has been for companies to shed non-core assets” in order to redeploy capital into more traditiona­l assets such as natural gas pipelines, said Patrick Kenny, analyst at National Bank Financial.

Private equity firms such as Brookfield Energy Partners L.P., a division of Brookfield Asset Management Inc., have flocked toward renewable energy developmen­ts, capitalizi­ng on government policies aimed at boosting renewable energy capacity. Brookfield and its partners last year bought a majority stake in TerraForm Power, a solar and wind producer in the U.S., for $656 million.

Cox said heightened interest from private equity players has also increased competitio­n on government-led request for proposals (RFPs) for new renewable developmen­ts, forcing some firms onto the sidelines.

“It’s that competitiv­e process to try to develop these RFPs that makes new renewable project bids less compelling for an Enbridge or a

TransCanad­a to pursue,” he said.

TransCanad­a reported on Thursday a drop in secondquar­ter profits of 11 per cent, beating analyst expectatio­ns.

Net income attributab­le to common shareholde­rs amounted to $785 million, or 88 cents per share, down from $881 million, or $1.01 per share during the same period in 2017.

The most recent quarter included an $11 million after-tax loss related to the winding down of U.S. Northeast power marketing contracts.

Total revenue slid to $3.20 billion from $3.23 billion a year before.

The company said it’s seeing strong interest from oil shippers in locking up the remaining space on its Alberta-to-Houston Keystone XL pipeline project and expects it to be fully subscribed. TransCanad­a has not yet made a final investment decision on its $8 billion Keystone XL expansion. That decision may come late this year or in early 2019, pending some remaining regulatory approvals needed and court challenges, chief executive Russ Girling said.

 ?? CNW GROUP / INNERGEX RENEWABLE ENERGY INC. ?? Private equity firms have flocked toward renewable energy developmen­ts to capitalize on government policies aimed at boosting the capacity of renewable energy.
CNW GROUP / INNERGEX RENEWABLE ENERGY INC. Private equity firms have flocked toward renewable energy developmen­ts to capitalize on government policies aimed at boosting the capacity of renewable energy.

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