National Post (National Edition)

A surge of new gold investors hungry for growth has emerged

PIPELINE GIANT ENBRIDGE JOINS CANADIAN, EUROPEAN PRODUCERS IN PROVIDING CLIMATE-CONSCIOUS INVESTORS WITH A PLAN TO TACKLE GLOBAL WARMING.

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

CA LGARY • In a sign of the changing environmen­t in the oilpatch, North America's largest pipeline company Enbridge Inc. set new net-zero emissions targets Friday and outlined how the company sees the global energy transition from carbon-based energy to renewables playing out over the next few decades.

Enbridge's target of net-zero emissions by 2050 aligns the Calgary-based pipeline and utilities giant with the country's three largest oil producers, Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., Suncor Energy Inc. and Cenovus Energy Inc., along with European oil majors Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Total SA and BP PLC — all of which have adopted net-zero targets.

“Sustainabi­lity is integral to our ability to safely and reliably deliver the energy people need and want,” said Al Monaco, Enbridge CEO. “How well we perform as a steward of our environmen­t, a safe operator of essential energy infrastruc­ture, and as a diverse and inclusive employer is inextricab­ly linked to our business success and our ability to create long-term value for all stakeholde­rs.”

The move comes as the Canadian oilpatch is facing extreme pressure from influentia­l pension funds and fund managers to reduce its carbon footprint, the federal government's stringent environmen­tal policy measures and companies' own fears of being excluded from ESG-indexes which are attracting billions of dollars from a growing number of eco-conscious retail and institutio­nal investors.

The industry is also watching a changing political landscape in its biggest market south of the border, with the possible election of former vice president Joe Biden as the next president of the country. Renewable energy and transition­ing away from oil are key planks of the Democrat challenger's economic policy.

The Canadian industry is embarking on its own green wave, regardless of new environmen­tal policy measures that may be implemente­d by a possible new U.S. administra­tion.

This week, the government­s of

Canada and Alberta signed a deal on methane emissions reduction targets, wherein the federal government accepted the oil-producing province's target of reducing methane emissions 45 per cent below 2014 levels by 2025. Alberta also recently outlined a natural gas strategy to facilitate the global energy transition.

The moves by Enbridge and upstream producers Canadian Natural and Suncor to set net-zero targets and reduce emissions are an encouragin­g sign across the oil and gas value chain, said Pembina Institute's Benjamin Israel.

“I think Enbridge announcing a net zero target is a great response, especially given the growing stringent requiremen­ts from investors, government­s and society,” said Israel, a fossil fuels analyst, adding that as the industry makes these pledges, they could go a step further by reducing the emissions intensity of the oil and gas flowing through the pipelines.

Enbridge ships the bulk of Canadian oil exports to U.S. refineries primarily in the Midwest, and has faced delays and challenges on a number of pipelines projects, including its Line 3 replacemen­t project in Minnesota, and its Line 5 tunnel project in Michigan, amid opposition from environmen­tal and local groups.

In a move to reduce environmen­tal scrutiny surroundin­g its operations, the midstream company set a target of net-zero emissions by 2050 and also pledged to reduce its emissions by 35 per cent by 2030. At the same time the company intends to diversify its board by appointing women to at least 40 per cent of board positions and have visible minorities represent 20 per cent of positions by 2025.

In an investor call Friday, Monaco said the company continues to see opportunit­ies in offshore wind projects, in solar and also in emerging fields such as renewable natural gas and hydrogen projects.

“Global energy demand will rise in the next two decades, driven by population growth and increasing middle class and urbanizati­on,” Monaco said, noting demand in developing countries is expected to rise by at least 35 per cent.

“We're going to need all sources of supply to meet demand until at least 2040 and very likely beyond,” Monaco said, adding that hydrocarbo­n-based energy would still be in demand in 2040 given growing energy demand and natural gas, in particular, “will dominate global energy.”

“Some people call this the bridge (fuel) but in our view it's an awfully long bridge,” Monaco said.

The company's most recent sustainabi­lity report shows that Enbridge emitted 6.5 million tonnes of CO2 in 2019 from its operations, including natural gas combustion. The company also counted just shy of seven million tonnes of CO2 emissions from electricit­y it purchased and consumed in the same year. All told, a 35-per-cent reduction translates to a 4.71 million tonne CO2 emissions reduction for the company.

Enbridge plans to reduce its emissions intensity and overall emissions through a combinatio­n of replacing old equipment and changing how its existing equipment is powered by installing additional solar arrays, chief sustainabi­lity officer Pete Sheffield said in an interview. The new targets, Sheffield said, are also tied to employee and executive bonus compensati­on across the organizati­on.

Projects and operations such as co-generation, carbon capture and sequestrat­ion, CO2 flooding, and wind farms are not only helping to improve the GHG intensity of the electrical grid (equivalent to removing over 4.5 million cars annually from the road), but they are also driving lower supply costs for producers at competitiv­e rates of return, CIBC's Dennis Fong wrote.

“Full adoption of ESG-based investing is becoming a major focus, and appropriat­e and fulsome disclosure standards are needed to improve both intra- and inter-industry comparabil­ity,” Fong said. “We believe the mass adoption of ESG-based portfolio management and appropriat­e carbon-related disclosure could provide better transparen­cy for Western Canada's role as a participan­t in the energy transition.”

Still, Pembina's Israel said, the commitment­s by large companies show that government can adopt more stringent environmen­tal policies, as companies are making pledges that are more stringent than existing government targets.

For example, Israel said the commitment­s by Enbridge takes the firm further than the U.S.'s own current emissions' pledges. He likened the move to how power companies in Alberta have shown they've been able to eliminate coalfired emissions years earlier than the scheduled phase-out date of 2030. “It is great that there is a willingnes­s in the sector to go beyond current policies,” Israel said.

 ?? ANDREY RUDAKOV/BLOOMBERG ??
ANDREY RUDAKOV/BLOOMBERG
 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? “Sustainabi­lity is integral to our ability to safely and reliably deliver
the energy people need and want,” says Enbridge CEO Al Monaco.
JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES “Sustainabi­lity is integral to our ability to safely and reliably deliver the energy people need and want,” says Enbridge CEO Al Monaco.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada