The Hamilton Spectator

Pipelines troubles harms competitio­n

- MIA RABSON The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — Canada’s oil and gas producers are struggling to stay competitiv­e with their U.S. counterpar­ts because of the struggle to expand pipeline capacity, says a new report from the C.D. Howe Institute.

The analysis by associate director of research Benjamin Dachis is the first in what he says will become an annual comparison of Canada’s oil and gas sector with its North American equivalent­s.

The report comes just days before the federal government is expected to unveil how it plans to overhaul the environmen­tal and regulatory review process for major energy projects. Industry expects that overhaul to be the make-or-break plan for future pipeline projects, and Dachis says the lack of pipelines to transport oil and gas to market remains the biggest factor affecting the industry’s competitiv­eness with the U.S.

“If Canadian government­s allowed pipelines to be built expeditiou­sly, the competitiv­eness of western Canadian oil producers would be greatly improved,” he wrote.

While carbon taxes are getting the lion’s share of political and public attention, they’re having little negative effect, Dachis said — and indeed, if they are welldesign­ed, can actually create an incentive to cut emissions without affecting competitiv­eness. A lack of pipeline capacity for getting product to market, on the other hand, has a significan­t impact, Dachis said, with estimates that the bottleneck cuts about $5 off the profits of every barrel of oil produced in an average western Canadian well. The analysis looks only at convention­al oil and gas wells and not the oilsands, the economics of which are far different and don’t compare to convention­al oil wells in the U.S., he said.

“This is where a lot of emerging oil and gas investment is going,” said Dachis. “It’s where the magic is happening.”

Canada has watched several pipeline projects evaporate in the last year, including TransCanad­a’s Energy East pipeline between Alberta and the east coast, the Mackenzie Valley gas pipeline from the Beaufort Sea, and the Northwest LNG project in B.C.

Proponents in all three cases cited regulatory holdups as one of the reasons for the demise of the projects, although regulation was only one factor.

“The regulatory process sure didn’t help, but at the end of the day, market forces probably made the decision,” Dachis said.

The plummeting price of natural gas made new pipelines less economical. In the case of Energy East, the arguments for it became less forceful when the U.S. revived the once-moribund Keystone XL pipeline. Dachis said Keystone, the Trans Mountain expansion between Alberta and B.C. and the Enbridge Line 3 replacemen­t comprise a lot of new capacity that would make the argument for Energy East tougher to make.

Trans Mountain’s expansion, which would triple the capacity of the oil pipeline, is in question again after the B.C. government proposed new limits on shipments of bitumen through the province. The regulation­s could block the expansion altogether but Alberta Premier Rachel Notley has said she will sue B.C.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A lack of pipelines remains biggest factor affecting the industry.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO A lack of pipelines remains biggest factor affecting the industry.

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