National Post (National Edition)

Ottawa may cut risk for Kinder Morgan investors

Will look for ways to provide ‘more certainty’

- Mia Rabson

OTTAWA • Canada is considerin­g several ways to reduce the financial risk for Kinder Morgan investors spooked by the uncertaint­y plaguing the planned Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr said Friday as a high-level, make-or-break meeting loomed on the horizon.

The government is still examining its options, Carr said, but won’t commit to a course of action before Sunday when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau jets home from Peru for a hastily organized meeting in Ottawa with British Columbia Premier John Horgan and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley.

“What we’re now faced with is to find ways to make sure there is more certainty than there is now,” Carr said in an interview.

“One of the ways to make sure there is more certainty is to look at possible financial arrangemen­ts that would help de-risk the project.”

Pipeline builder Kinder Morgan has halted all nonessenti­al spending on the project until it gets assurances from Ottawa that the issues will be resolved. The federal government has until May 31 to respond.

Trudeau has put a lot of political eggs in the Trans Mountain basket, risking political capital among climatecha­nge activists in search of middle ground that allows for pipeline constructi­on alongside improved environmen­tal safeguards.

Trudeau, who is in Peru for the Summit of the Americas, was originally supposed to fly to Paris directly from Lima on Sunday for meetings with French President Emmanuel Macron. Instead, he’ll be back in the national capital in search of a resolution to an intractabl­e — and politicall­y perilous — dispute.

Carr refused to discuss the specific financial options available, other than to say there are many of them on the table and they’re all being considered.

One of those options, however, is to buy a stake in the pipeline, something Notley has already said Alberta would be willing to do. Canada and Alberta could jointly buy the pipeline outright, or at least a significan­t stake in the project.

Another option is to provide a guaranteed source of revenue for private investors if the pipeline completion date misses the target for when returns on their investment­s were supposed to start flowing.

The company had targeted May 31 as the make-or-break deadline to start constructi­on if the pipeline was to hit those investment targets. That date is now the drop-dead date Kinder Morgan has given Canada to prove the company should have the confidence to move forward.

Political strategist Robin Sears, a principal at Earnscliff­e Strategy Group, said another option would be to increase spending on the environmen­tal protection side, including on improved research into preventing and mitigating the impacts of a diluted bitumen spill.

“The company has not done what it needs to have done to satisfy the people of B.C. they have taken the steps necessary to protect the environmen­t,” said Sears.

Sears said the Trudeau government has an oceans protection plan on paper, but hasn’t done much if anything to put it into action.

Carr was only prepared to say Sunday’s meeting between Trudeau and the premiers would be a chance for the various sides to share their positions and try and talk things out — not necessaril­y a day when further action would be announced.

That, said Sears, would be a bad political move.

“If they come out of that meeting on Sunday and (Trudeau) says, ‘We’ve made good progress and I’m off to Paris,’ it will cost them severely,” he said.

University of British Columbia politics professor Kathryn Harrison said she sees little common ground. “They have drawn lines in the sand that are simply incompatib­le.”

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Jim Carr

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