National Post (National Edition)

Value of existing pipelines on rise

New projects thwarted by ESG targets

- NIA WILLIAMS AND LAILA KEARNEY

CALGARY • Existing energy pipelines in North America are becoming increasing­ly valuable because investor focus on environmen­tal, social, and corporate governance (ESG) issues is making it more difficult to finance new infrastruc­ture, midstream industry executives said on Wednesday.

The “tobaccofic­ation” of the energy industry in recent years has led to less money flowing to the midstream sector as investors and the public increasing­ly focus ESG investment­s, Peter Bowden, global head of energy investment banking at Jefferies, told IHS Markit's CERAWeek conference.

“It has become much more difficult to finance these projects,” Bowden said, referencin­g midstream projects. “In terms of equity capital the markets are severely depressed.”

From 2013 to 2015, average equity issuance per year for midstream was US$25

IT HAS BECOME MUCH MORE DIFFICULT TO FINANCE THESE PROJECTS.

billion, but in the three years through 2020, it averaged just US$1 billion yearly, he added.

New oil and gas pipeline projects are a “huge leap,” Al Monaco, chief executive of Canada's Enbridge Inc. said at the conference, and companies are instead prioritizi­ng expansions, repurposin­g, and extensions of existing assets.

“The value of the pipe we have in the ground is increasing. We have not seen that reflected yet in equity prices but it's got to get there because you simply cannot replicate (it),” Monaco said.

Calgary-based Enbridge's Line 3 replacemen­t project, which will ship more oilsands crude from Alberta to the U.S. Midwest, has faced years of regulatory delays and legal challenges. Rival TC Energy's Keystone XL oil pipeline was blocked earlier this year when U.S. President Joe Biden revoked its permit.

Alan Armstrong, CEO of Tulsa, Oklahoma-based, pipeline operator Williams Companies Inc., said natural gas infrastruc­ture is also being impacted by the move away from fossil fuels, even though it should play a role in the energy transition. Natural gas is abundant in the United States and has lower carbon emissions than coal.

Both Armstrong and Monaco said existing infrastruc­ture would be key in transporti­ng renewable fuels and clean energy sources like hydrogen in future.

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