National Post

TC Energy wins on pipeline expansion but victory tempered

Coastal Gaslink project facing ballooning costs

- Meghan Potkins

CALGARY • TC Energy Corp. scored a win this week when the federal government approved an important expansion to its NOVA Gas Transmissi­on Ltd. (NGTL) pipeline system, putting the Calgary-based company in a position to meet growing demand for natural gas in the United States.

But the glory of that victory was short-lived. TC Energy’s stock ended the week down about 10 per cent, after chief executive François Poirier revealed the price tag for the embattled Coastal Gaslink pipeline project was expected to balloon once again.

The good news came on Wednesday, when the Canada Energy Regulator conditiona­lly approved TC Energy’s West Path Delivery 2023 project, which will add an additional 40 kilometres of new natural gas pipeline to the existing 25,000-kilometre NGTL network, allowing the company to ship gas from the western Canadian Sedimentar­y Basin to markets in Canada and the U.S., specifical­ly Washington, Oregon and California.

Bottleneck­s on the critical pipeline network have long been a source of frustratio­n for western Canadian gas producers, and has become an even greater source of contention as gas production has grown to record levels.

Earlier this year, as global gas prices were soaring thanks to red-hot demand overseas, spot prices at the AECO hub in western Canada collapsed and briefly turned negative as maintenanc­e on the NGTL pipeline system resulted in reduced capacity, stranding gas supplies in Alberta and British Columbia.

Before the energy regulator revealed its decision, producers were celebratin­g TC Energy’s recently announced operating outlook for 2023, which said “meaningful” capacity had been added at key points on the NGTL, according to analysts.

“Outages in recent years have led to profound impacts on western Canadian natural gas pricing, with differenti­als blowing-out as volumes pressed against reduced capacity,” wrote Michael Shaw and Andrew Bradford of Raymond James in a recent research note. “The added capacity will provide (upstream producers) with room to grow production volumes, increased throughput at gas gathering processing facilities, liquids pipelines, and downstream liquid fractionat­ion and marketing facilities.”

Ottawa’s approval of the pipeline expansion came with strings, however. TC Energy will have to meet 34 binding conditions related to environmen­tal protection­s and the involvemen­t of Indigenous people in the project monitoring and safety, according to Natural Resources Canada.

The company didn’t seem to mind. TC Energy said in a statement on Thursday that constructi­on on the West Path Delivery project could be complete by Nov. 1, 2023. The project is part of a $1.2-billion expansion program TC Energy first announced in 2019, underpinne­d by approximat­ely 258 million cubic feet per day (mcf/d) of new longterm service contracts.

But if TC Energy executives were feeling celebrator­y about the approval, their enthusiasm was quickly dulled by the company’s acknowledg­ment of the ballooning cost of its Coastal Gaslink pipeline project.

At TC Energy’s investor day event in Toronto on Thursday, the company said the 670-kilometre pipeline, which will ship natural gas to the LNG Canada export

OUTAGES HAVE LED TO PROFOUND IMPACTS ON PRICING...

facility in Kitimat, B.C., is 80 per cent complete. Getting to 100 per cent will require another material increase in cost, although TC Energy declined to say by how much.

In July, the company said Coastal Gaslink’s price-tag had reached $11.2 billion, up from an earlier estimate of $6.6 billion. TC Energy blamed rising labour costs, a shortage of skilled labour and contractor underperfo­rmance and disputes for the latest cost overrun. It said a higher capital cost estimate would be provided early next year, and that the revised estimate would also factor in unforeseen events, including drought conditions, erosion and sediment control challenges.

Bank of Nova Scotia analyst Robert Hope pegged the potential increase at between $1 billion and $3 billion.

“There were also limited details regarding the recoverabi­lity of the higher costs, whether through tolls, its partners, or its contractor­s,” Hope said in a research note. “The constructi­on environmen­t surroundin­g the CGL project remains challengin­g, given labour pressures as well as the productivi­ty of its contractor­s.”

TC Energy closed Friday at $58.19, down one per cent in Toronto and about 11 per cent lower than its opening value on Monday.

 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? The Canada Energy Regulator conditiona­lly approved TC Energy’s West Path Delivery 2023 project on Wednesday, allowing them to ship gas to Canada and the U.S.
POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES The Canada Energy Regulator conditiona­lly approved TC Energy’s West Path Delivery 2023 project on Wednesday, allowing them to ship gas to Canada and the U.S.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada