Times Colonist

Why industry isn’t thrilled by federal ownership

Energy executives say Trans Mountain more likely to be built; less thrilled by federal ownership

- DAN HEALING

CALGARY — Canada’s energy industry welcomed news Tuesday that the Trans Mountain expansion pipeline is more likely to be built, but expressed grave misgivings over Ottawa’s decision to buy the project for $4.5 billion in order to achieve that goal.

Canada needs infrastruc­ture like that designed to triple Trans Mountain’s capacity to move crude oil and refined products from the Alberta oilsands and Edmonton refining complex to the West Coast, said Chris Bloomer, CEO of the Canadian Energy Pipeline Associatio­n.

But he said the associatio­n is “deeply concerned” that the government felt it had to purchase the project to get it built. Ottawa’s move comes 18 politicall­y fraught months after it had been approved.

“Something had to happen,” Bloomer said of delays blamed on opposition by British Columbia’s provincial government, municipali­ties, Indigenous groups and individual protesters.

“It’s a little confusing that the government felt it needed to nationaliz­e this asset and own it in order to assert what we all thought along the way was its jurisdicti­on.”

Pipelines that cross provincial borders are federally regulated, but B.C. argues in a court challenge that it has the right to restrict diluted bitumen shipments within its boundaries.

The situation has created a “confused” marketplac­e in which different pipeline projects are treated unequally and no one knows the rules future proposals are expected to follow, Bloomer said.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said at a conference Tuesday that federal control over the pipeline could simplify developmen­t of at least this project.

“When you shift the ownership of the pipeline from a private corporatio­n to … a federal government that has explicit control over resource projects that go between provinces, a lot of the legal barriers and a lot of the challenge points actually disappear,” he said.

The federal move is welcome to get the stalled project going, said Tim McMillan, CEO of the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, adding he also is pleased that Ottawa has committed to put the project back in private hands “where it belongs.”

“I think these are extraordin­ary circumstan­ces and we should work very hard never to find ourselves in this position again.”

Trans Mountain owner Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd.’s shares lurched higher, then fell, as investors digested the fallout from the federal government purchase deal announced early Tuesday.

The stock rose to $18 in early trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange, then closed about three per cent lower at $16.10 on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

The shares likely fell because investors were disappoint­ed that they would no longer be eligible to share in the financial upside of the expansion project, analyst Robert Fitzmartyn of GMP FirstEnerg­y Capital said.

The subsidiary of Houstonbas­ed Kinder Morgan, Inc., estimated the deal is worth about $12 per restricted voting share, after capital gains tax — approximat­ely three-quarters of its total share price.

Kinder Morgan Canada will continue to hold an integrated network of crude tank storage and rail terminals in Alberta. It will also own a terminal in Vancouver and the Cochin Pipeline system, which transports light condensate from the United States to Fort Saskatchew­an, just northeast of Edmonton.

It expects its approximat­ely 30 per cent share of after-tax proceeds to be about $1.25 billion. The company didn’t specify how it would spend the proceeds of the sale, but did say it plans to continue to invest in Canada.

“We’ve agreed to a fair price for our shareholde­rs and found a way forward for this national interest project,” Steve Kean, CEO of both Kinder Morgan Canada and its parent company, said on a morning conference call.

The company will work with the government to try to find a third party to buy the assets by July 22.

But Finance Minister Bill Morneau said there is no deadline to find a buyer.

Kinder Morgan Canada had ceased all non-essential spending on the Trans Mountain expansion in April, vowing to cancel it by a deadline of Thursday unless it received assurances it can proceed without delays and without undue risk to shareholde­rs.

After the federal announceme­nt, Kean said the work would be restarted soon, with the government funding constructi­on. The sale, which must still be approved by Kinder Morgan Canada shareholde­rs, is expected to close in the second half of the year.

Analysts were less than enthusiast­ic about the sale.

In a research note, Desjardins Capital Markets analysts questioned whether constructi­on of the controvers­ial pipeline would proceed any smoother under government ownership.

The transactio­n could further “galvanize opposition” from special-interest groups while complicati­ng the government’s ability to provide protection for constructi­on sites in the Lower Mainland, including its willingnes­s to call in the RCMP if needed, they said.

“We maintain our previous concern that the federal Liberal government will likely be highly reluctant to exercise force approachin­g the window of the next election cycle, expected next fall,” they wrote.

They said the news is otherwise positive for the oil and gas sector, though it will have no effect on tight pipeline takeaway capacity until at least 2021. Transport limitation­s have been blamed for higher price discounts on western Canadian oilsands bitumen blend crude in the first quarter.

Pipeline customers Suncor Energy Inc. and Cenovus Energy Inc. welcomed the move as a sign that the federal government recognizes the importance of getting more Alberta crude from the oilsands to more markets.

However, GMP FirstEnerg­y said the buyout was negative for future Canadian investment prospects.

“The federal government has set a precedent that it will nationaliz­e projects of significan­t importance rather using the rule of law and prior regulatory approvals to push a project forward under private ownership,” its analysts said in a report.

Paul de Jong, president of the Progressiv­e Contractor­s Associatio­n of Canada, whose members are expected to help build the pipeline, said he is pleased it is more likely to proceed but also hopes that government interventi­on “not become the norm.”

 ??  ?? A Port Authority vessel patrols Burrard Inlet Tuesday as an oil tanker docks at Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain marine terminal in Burnaby.
A Port Authority vessel patrols Burrard Inlet Tuesday as an oil tanker docks at Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain marine terminal in Burnaby.

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