Calgary Herald

Three oil pipeline projects continue to inch forward

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Three proposals to expand western Canadian oil pipeline capacity have been stalled for years by environmen­tal and Indigenous opposition in Canada and the United States.

Lately, the proposals have cleared several obstacles, but others remain. Canadian oil companies such as Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., Suncor Inc., and Cenovus Energy say the projects are critical to lifting prices and ending government-ordered curtailmen­ts in Alberta.

LINE 3

This Enbridge Inc. project would replace an aging pipeline that moves oil from Alberta to Superior, Wis., allowing it to double capacity to 760,000 barrels per day (bpd). The Canadian portion began service in December, but Line 3 has run into obstacles in Minnesota.

The project cleared key hurdles Monday at the state’s Public Utilities Commission, which determined that a revised environmen­tal impact statement is adequate. The commission and issued a new certificat­e of need.

TRANS MOUNTAIN

The 67-year-old pipeline runs from Alberta to the Pacific Coast in British Columbia, giving Canadian oil ocean access to West Coast U.S. refiners and Asia. A plan to nearly triple capacity to 890,000 bpd faced so many obstacles that Kinder Morgan Inc. sold it in 2018 to the Canadian government, which has been trying to get the project done ever since.

Canada’s Supreme Court removed one hurdle in January 2020, when it rejected a bid from British Columbia to regulate shipments of hazardous substances such as oil.

Constructi­on is already underway on the project.

Canada’s Federal Court of Appeal on Tuesday dismissed a challenge to the approval of the pipeline expansion by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government.

KEYSTONE XL

TC Energy’s plan to build a new line connecting Alberta with Nebraska dates back more than a decade and is seen as a watershed for the environmen­tal movement’s strategy of targeting pipelines to halt oil production growth.

The company, formerly known as Transcanad­a, laid out an aggressive constructi­on schedule for 2020 and received a U.S. right-ofway allowing it to build the portion that crosses federal land.

It still faces court challenges and TC has not yet made its final investment decision to build KXL.

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