National Post

LNG failure its own fault, insider says

Industry needs better public ties

- Kevin Orland

• The Canadian natural gas industry shouldn’t blame environmen­talists, First Nation communitie­s or the government for its failure to get LNG export infrastruc­ture built. It should blame itself.

That’s the view of Seven Generation­s Energy Ltd. founder Pat Carlson, who stepped down as chief executive of the Calgary- based natural gas producer last month.

Carlson, who made community relations a hallmark of Seven Generation­s’ culture, says the industry needs to do a better job of involving those most affected by its operations.

Businesses can’t rely on the government to push projects past the objections of local communitie­s, said the 63- year- old Carlson in a wide- ranging interview. Instead, government­s should provide a final examinatio­n of operations that have already been mostly agreed on. That philosophy helped Seven Generation­s build its Kakwa River Project in northwest Alberta, he said. It has also helped the company’s shares outperform its peers.

“A pipeline to the Pacific and an LNG project on the Pacific, where the people along the route are involved — they’re owners, they’re builders — I don’t know that that’s been put forward,” Carlson said.

“Maybe it has and I just don’t know about it, but I suspect it hasn’t, and I suspect there’s an opportunit­y there.”

A project that needs government assistance to overcome local resistance represents a failure of the freemarket system and a step toward a state- controlled economy, he said.

And industry should work to convince environmen­talists that getting Canadian natural gas to the coast fights climate change by cut- ting China’s dependence on dirtier coal, he said.

Carlson’s views won’t surprise those who’ve followed his career. Like many of its peers, Seven Generation­s helps fund hospitals and scholarshi­ps in the region where it operates, and it works to hire local contractor­s.

But the company also puts out an annual stakeholde­r report, which this year started with Carlson’s review of the last thousand years of human history and the evolution of democracy.

In fact, Carlson founded Seven Generation­s — his fourth energy startup — on a code of conduct that says the company has only the rights given to it by society and that it should exist primarily to serve its communitie­s, its workers and shareholde­rs.

So far, it’s been a successful idea. Seven Generation­s has gained 23 per cent from its initial public offering in October, 2014, through June 30 of this year, when Carlson stepped down.

In that same time period, the Standard & Poor’s/ Toronto Stock Exchange energy index dropped 24 per cent, and natural gas futures slid 19 per cent.

Carlson developed his approach in a career that included time at Londonbase­d BP PLC, where he learned the importance of diversific­ation, and Calgarybas­ed Husky Energy Inc., where he saw the value in a company keeping its operationa­l headquarte­rs in the region where it operated.

His entreprene­urial career began after he was laid off in 1998. Carlson’s first three startups were heavyoil operator Passage Energy Inc., eventually bought by Bonavista Energy Corp.; Krang Energy Inc., sold to Viking Energy Royalty Trust for about $ 176 million, and North American Oil Sands, which was bought by Statoil ASA for about $2.2 billion.

Carlson founded Seven Generation­s in 2008, funded largely by four private equity firms, and acquired land in North Dakota’s Bakken play, northeast British Columbia and Alberta’s Kakwa region.

The company sold the first two holdings to focus on the Kakwa after tests wells produced condensate volumes that were 200 times convention­al expectatio­ns.

Carlson says he hasn’t looked back to see how the lands the company sold have turned out, but he does wish the company had taken a different approach to its financing.

“We had four funds with four different sets of priorities, four different ways of managing risk,” Carlson said. “Those kind of things became areas of dispute among our founding owners. So I wouldn’t do that again.”

Carlson says he’s confident Seven Generation­s’ culture will remain intact under new chief executive Marty Proctor. He’s also optimistic for the Canadian natural gas industry’s prospects over the long term, despite the current perception that it’s trailing it American counterpar­ts.

“Canadians are a little more conservati­ve, a little less aggressive in the applicatio­ns of new technologi­es, but they certainly don’t lack the understand­ing,” he said.

The industry also will benefit as society shifts from coal and oil to natural gas and renewable energy sources, he said. And he’s confident the idea that natural gas is better for the world will eventually be a winner among environmen­ta lists, helping Canada’ s producers.

“We can l and LNG in China cheaper than other sources can, so it’s a logical business and it’s a good thing to do for the planet,” Carlson said.

“It’s a question of building public confidence.”

WE CAN LAND LNG IN CHINA CHEAPER THAN OTHER SOURCES CAN.

 ?? JOCELYN TURNER / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Former Seven Generation­s Energy CEO Pat Carlson says Canada’s natural gas industry shouldn’t blame environmen­talists, First Nation communitie­s or the government for its failure to get LNG export infrastruc­ture built.
JOCELYN TURNER / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Former Seven Generation­s Energy CEO Pat Carlson says Canada’s natural gas industry shouldn’t blame environmen­talists, First Nation communitie­s or the government for its failure to get LNG export infrastruc­ture built.

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