Toronto Star

Pipeline giant sues rival over GTA deal

Transcanad­a Corp. taking Enbridge to court in Ontario for backing out of agreement

- LAUREN KRUGEL

CALGARY— TransCanad­a Corp. is suing the gas distributi­on business of rival Enbridge Inc. over its decision to end an agreement that would see the two firms co-operate on a 23kilometr­e stretch of natural gas pipeline in the Greater Toronto Area.

“TransCanad­a will suffer irreparabl­e harm if Enbridge does not abide by the terms of the (memorandum of understand­ing),” TransCanad­a said in a statement of claim filed in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice last week.

To accommodat­e growing energy demand in the GTA, Enbridge proposed in late 2012 to expand its gas distributi­on system in the region. Around the same time and in the same area, TransCanad­a was also expanding its own natural gas infrastruc­ture.

The Ontario Energy Board has encouraged natural gas shippers in the province to consult and co-ordinate with one another to make sure the work is done in the most efficient way possible.

As part of those efforts, Enbridge and TransCanad­a signed a memorandum of understand­ing in January to build one section of pipeline that would be used by both companies — called “Section A.”

However, Enbridge terminated its MOU with TransCanad­a last month.

Guy Jarvis, president of Enbridge’s gas business, said that was because TransCanad­a was doling out space on its share of the GTA pipeline in a manner Enbridge believed was against the law.

Under Ontario Energy Board regulation­s, pipeline capacity must be offered to the market in “an open and non-discrimina­tory manner,” he said.

Jarvis said TransCanad­a failed to do so because it didn’t offer all of the capacity that was made available to it and it gave some customers toll discounts.

“In Ontario, those regulatory requiremen­ts are a law, so we were in a position where in order for us to continue forth and fulfil the MOU would have created a situation where we would be breaching a law . . . and as a result, we terminated the memorandum of understand­ing,” said Jarvis.

A TransCanad­a spokesman declined to offer further comment, as the issue is now before the courts.

In its statement of claim, TransCanad­a accuses Enbridge of terminatin­g the MOU “for its own convenienc­e.” It wants the court to order Enbridge to “continue to operate under and abide by all the terms of the MOU.”

Alternativ­ely, TransCanad­a is seeking damages for financial harm — estimated at $4.5 billion “or such further amount as may be determined at trial."

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