Support for Trans Mountain drying up
MAY 31 DEADLINE: Petroleum analyst expects Kinder Morgan to walk away from $7.4b pipeline expansion
With the clock ticking on Kinder Morgan’s May 31 deadline to get certainty that it can build its $7.4-billion Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion, industry analysts doubt the company’s demands can be met.
No new suitors have emerged, at least publicly, to share the risk of the project despite federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s pitch in mid-May that plenty of investors would be interested in the pipeline because of Ottawa’s promise to indemnify the project against extra costs of politically motivated delays.
Morneau had named the country’s pension funds as possible investors. And Alberta had talked earlier about taking a stake.
“I think they will walk away and I wouldn’t blame them at all,” Roger McKnight, a petroleum analyst with Oshawa, Ont.-based En-Pro International, said of Kinder Morgan.
McKnight said he thinks that financial security for the project is less important to Kinder Morgan than security it can be built and built safely, which is difficult to satisfy, particularly in the short time remaining.
But there was some positive news for Kinder Morgan Thursday: B.C. Supreme Court Justice J. Christopher Grauer dismissed challenges by the Squamish Nation and the City of Vancouver that had argued there was inadequate consultation during B.C.’s environmental approval of the project, which took place under the former Liberal government.
But McKnight said that’s simply a reminder of the several court hurdles the project has to overcome.
In a written statement Thursday, federal Finance Department spokeswoman Jocelyn Sweet said Ottawa was “taking action” to enable the project to go ahead, but would not disclose details of continuing discussions.
Kinder Morgan’s key concern has been the introduction this spring by B.C. Premier John Horgan’s government of new uncertainties around the shipment of heavy oil from Alberta through B.C.
Horgan’s NDP government filed a reference case with the B.C. Court of Appeal to determine if the province has jurisdiction to restrict heavy oil transport, bring in new spill regulations and add cleanup funding requirements.
Whether B.C. is successful or not in court, the outcome is certain to be challenged at the Supreme Court of Canada, meaning a lengthy delay before a final outcome.
Kinder Morgan CEO Steve Kean has said his company has already spent more than $1 billion and cannot afford to put more capital at risk.
On Thursday, Kinder Morgan said it does not intend to issue updates or disclosures on the status of the con- sultations unless they have concluded or they reach an agreement that satisfies its objectives.
Ed Kallio, a principal of Calgary-based Eau Claire Energy Advisory Inc., said he viewed Alberta Premier Rachel Notley’s decision not to attend a Western premiers’ conference this week as a signal Alberta is going to backstop the project in some way.
It wouldn’t have to be a long-term stake in the project, with it eventually being sold back to Kinder Morgan or another company, but to meet the May 31 deadline, Alberta is going to have to step in, said Kallio.
“B.C.’s strategy is playing out perfectly. They are just delaying, hoping that the investors will get cold feet and that’s exactly what is happening,” said Kallio.