National Post

Producers slam Enbridge’s efforts over long-term Mainline contracts

Anti-competitiv­e says former NEB chairman

- Geoffrey Morgan

CALGARY• The former chairman of the National Energy Board has blasted an applicatio­n by Enbridge Inc. to change how Canada’s largest oil pipeline network operates, calling it an attempt to fend off competitio­n from new pipelines such as the Trans Mountain Expansion project.

Roland Priddle, the former chair and board member of the National Energy Board, filed evidence last month before Canada’s pipeline regulator, now called the Canada Energy Regulator, that described a controvers­ial Enbridge plan to sign long- term contracts for its Mainline pipeline network as a move “to retain Mainline volumes and reduce its long-term volume risk.”

The risk for Enbridge is that the federally owned Trans Mountain Expansion project or TC Energy Corp.’s Keystone XL pipeline, both of which are under constructi­on, could begin siphoning crude oil volumes off the Calgary-based Enbridge’s Mainline, once they start operations in the next few years.

The Mainline is Canada’s largest oil export pipeline network carrying more than 3 million barrels of oil per day from Alberta to refineries in the U. S. Midwest, Ontario and Quebec. For 70 years, it has operated as Canada’s oil spot market — meaning that 100 per cent of the network’s capacity is available for short- term monthly shipments.

Spot contracts give producers flexibilit­y to readily secure volumes without locking them into expensive long- term commitment­s with pipeline operators. But Enbridge has been engaged in a years- long regulatory fight with Canadian oil companies over a plan that would almost completely invert the amount of pipeline capacity available to the spot market by converting its Mainline to a system where 90 per cent of the network is committed to long-term contracts.

Priddle, who filed the submission on behalf of a group of large Canadian oil companies including Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. and MEG Energy Corp., said in the Dec. 7 filing that “there is absolutely no justificat­ion” for approving Enbridge’s applicatio­n.

“The support that Enbridge has marshalled for the applicatio­n does not represent the Canadian public interest: it is biased in favour of U. S. refineries and against the Canadian crude oil producing interests,” Priddle said in the submission.

Priddle, who was NEB chair and a board member between 1986 and 1997, is now a consultant on various pipeline issues and has previously testified on various aspects of the scrapped Northern Gateway, Energy East pipelines and the under- constructi­on North Montney Mainline project.

Enbridge is expected to respond to Priddle and other opponents of its plan, and counter their evidence, in CER filings due Feb. 1.

The CER is expected to make a decision on whether the pipeline giant is allowed to move to a contracted system in the first half of this year, which will bring to a close the years- long fight over the plan between Enbridge and Canadian oil companies.

In response to questions about whether the contractin­g process was an attempt to fend off competitiv­e threats from Keystone XL and Trans Mountain, Enbridge spokespers­on Jesse Semko said in a statement the company is looking to increase pipeline capacity out of Western Canada.

“We have several investment­s we can make to optimize our Mainline system and improve transporta­tion ( egress) out of Western Canada by 300,000 barrels per day,” Semko said in an emailed statement, adding, “We can’t make these financial commitment­s without Mainline contractin­g.”

Semko said the company has responded to more than 3,000 questions from shippers participat­ing in the CER regulatory hearings since the process began in December 2019.

In that applicatio­n to the CER , Enbridge said it “faces competitio­n from existing and potential future pipelines exiting the Western Canada Sedimentar­y Basin” including Keystone XL project and the Trans Mountain expansion project.

“The board has approved the constructi­on of competitiv­e pipelines on the basis that enhanced pipeline competitio­n and increased customer choice serve the public interest,” the company notes in its applicatio­n, which also says the CER should ensure a “level playing field” between Enbridge, whose Mainline operates as the spot market, and the competitor­s, whose pipelines operate on longterm contracts.

Small- and mid-sized Canadian oil companies disagree that Enbridge needs longterm contracts on the Mainline.

“It is clear that Enbridge faces almost no harm if the Mainline is not contracted, however Canadian producers would face grave consequenc­es for as long as 20 years,” the Explorers and Producers Associatio­n of Canada, a trade associatio­n, wrote in its filing, which described the potential contractin­g process as “a major and destabiliz­ing event.”

“It is highly likely to weaken WCSB crude oil price and lower the netbacks received by producers, and has the potential to block many upstream producers from accessing the Mainline,” the EPAC submission reads. “Lower prices will necessaril­y mean weakened economic viability for producers, shrinking investment in Western Canadian communitie­s and declining royalties and tax payments to government.”

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