Toronto Star

Enbridge eyeing expansion in Mexico

Country looking to revive its energy industry with foreign investment

-

CALGARY— The chief executive of Enbridge Inc. said there could be opportunit­ies to build new pipelines in Mexico as the country opens its energy industry up to outside investment.

“They’re obviously in significan­t need of pipeline infrastruc­ture,” said Al Monaco, adding that goes for both oil and natural gas.

Mexico is in the process of ending the government’s 75-year monopoly over energy through a series of reforms. It hopes private investment and foreign expertise can help revive its oil and gas production, which has been waning.

A delegation of Mexican government officials and business leaders visited Calgary earlier this year to tout the opportunit­ies.

“Obviously these changes that have been brought down are very positive in that they’re going to encourage a lot more investment,” Monaco said in a conference call Friday to discuss the company’s second-quarter results.

However, Enbridge has no immediate plans to enter Mexico, he said.

“We’re going to watch to see how these regulation­s work through and we’ll keep our finger on the pulse and see where we go from there.”

Enbridge rival TransCanad­a Corp. already has a foothold in Mexico, with two pipelines operating and expansions in the hopper. It, too, has indicated the Mexican reforms could mean opportunit­ies for new projects.

Enbridge executives also discussed the possibilit­y of building a new rail unloading facility in Illinois that would help bring Alberta crude to the U.S. Gulf Coast. Its tentative startup date would be early 2016.

The facility, which is expected to have a capacity of about 140,000 barrels per day, would be adjacent to the start point of Enbridge’s Flanagan South pipeline. Flanagan South is slated to start shipping crude to Cushing, Okla., later this year. From there, the oil can make its way to the Gulf Coast through the Seaway pipeline, partly owned by Enbridge.

Earlier Friday, Enbridge posted a second-quarter profit of $756 million or 91 cents per share, boosted by its hedging program and other onetime items. The result compared with a profit of $42 million, or five cents per share, in the same quarter of 2013. The company’s adjusted earnings were $328 million, or 40 cents per share, compared with $306 million, or 38 cents per share, in the same quarter last year.

Analysts had been expecting 39 cents of adjusted earnings per share, according to data compiled by Thomson Reuters.

Enbridge said its second-quarter adjusted earnings growth was primarily driven by liquids pipeline business.

Cash flow from operating activities was $812 million, down from $937 million year-over-year.

In June, the federal government gave the green light to Enbridge’s Alberta-to-West Coast Northern Gateway pipeline project, subject to 209 conditions recommende­d by a regulatory panel late last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada