Times Colonist

Veresen pitching $10B LNG plant in Oregon

- DAN HEALING

CALGARY — The Canadian company whose proposal to build an LNG export terminal in Oregon was derailed by U.S. regulators last year has resubmitte­d its applicatio­n for a bigger, more expensive project.

Calgary-based Veresen Inc. said its Jordan Cove project is now estimated to cost $10 billion US to build, up from $7.5 billion US under its previous proposal, and would have capacity of 7.8 million tonnes per year, up from six million.

The project includes a liquefied natural gas terminal in Coos Bay, Oregon and a 370-kilometre pipeline that will bring natural gas originatin­g in the U.S. Rockies and B.C. from a southern Oregon hub to the terminal.

Veresen CEO Don Althoff said the new proposal submitted to the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has undergone changes to overcome landowner complaints that led to FERC’s ruling in 2016 that its negative impacts outweighed its public benefits.

FERC also found that demand for the project had not been adequately demonstrat­ed.

“Our significan­t efforts to optimize the design to minimize its environmen­tal footprint and accommodat­e landowner requests, as well as the support of our world-class LNG buyers, should result in the receipt of the positive regulatory decisions required to build Jordan Cove,” Althoff said in a statement.

The company said it would not provide further comment.

AltaCorp Capital analyst Dirk Lever said the routing changes should make FERC approval more likely.

“[The previous applicatio­n denial] really came down to eminent domain. To build the pipeline, you’re going on people’s property. So they changed the routing so it goes on less people’s property,” he said.

The new Jordan Cove applicatio­n eliminates a 420-megawatt power plant, makes more than 50 pipeline route adjustment­s and promises to use trenchless drilling techniques to minimize environmen­tal impacts at water crossings, Veresen said.

Lever said a soon-to-close $9.7-billion friendly takeover of Veresen by Calgary-based rival Pembina Pipeline improves chances the LNG project will be built because the resulting company will be much larger with more financial clout.

He said Jordan Cove would be the first LNG export facility on the U.S. West Coast, where it will have an advantage over existing facilities on the U.S. Gulf Coast because it is closer to Asia.

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