Calgary Herald

Pipeline wants insurers shielded

Trans Mountain goes to regulator

- ROD NICKEL

WINNIPEG Trans Mountain Corp., the Canadian government corporatio­n that operates an oil pipeline, has asked a regulator to keep the identities of its insurers private as environmen­tal activists push them to drop coverage.

Activists have stepped up pressure on banks and insurers to drop financing and insurance for fossil fuel companies, leading to European companies such as AXA and Zurich pulling back from underwriti­ng coal and oilsands projects.

Trans Mountain is nearly tripling capacity of the pipeline to carry 890,000 barrels of crude and refined products per day from Hardisty, near Edmonton, to the British Columbia coast. Much of the oil it transports comes from the oilsands — a particular focus of protests due to their high carbon emissions.

The expansion has also raised fears about spills.

The pipeline's importance to Canada's oil industry increased after U.S. President Joe Biden revoked a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline last month.

Disclosing Trans Mountain's insurers publicly may result in pressure that shrinks its pool of potential insurers and raises premiums for the pipeline and its shippers, the corporatio­n said in a submission on Monday to the Canada Energy Regulator (CER).

Trans Mountain said it incurred higher costs last year due to dwindling insurance options.

The firm, which must submit an updated plan on its financial resources to the CER by April 30, asked the regulator to keep its insurers' identities confidenti­al.

“Trans Mountain has already observed increasing reluctance from insurance companies to offer insurance coverage for the pipeline and to do so at a reasonable price,” it wrote.

Trans Mountain has the necessary insurance in place for its current operations and for constructi­on of the expansion, it said in a statement to Reuters.

The Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, which represents some of Trans Mountain's shippers, said in a separate submission to the CER that it supports the pipeline's request.

Jamie Kalliongis, spokeswoma­n for The Sunrise Project, a research organizati­on focused on the environmen­t, said granting Trans Mountain's applicatio­n would undermine activists' efforts to stop expansion of the pipeline.

Last week, Vancouver police arrested Indigenous protesters who targeted Trans Mountain insurers, the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs said.

The CER said it was reviewing the request.

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