Vancouver Sun

VERESEN ‘BACK TO SQUARE ONE’ WITH OREGON LNG PROJECT

Calgary-based pipeline firm will review all options after setback, Geofrey Morgan writes.

- Financial Post gmorgan@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/geoffreymo­rgan

Veresen Inc. may wait until president-elect Donald Trump is sworn into ofce to re-apply for U.S. permits to build a liquefied natural gas project on the Oregon coastline, according to analysts.

The U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission dealt Calgarybas­ed pipeline and midstream company Veresen a setback on Friday, when it declined the company’s applicatio­n for a re-hearing on its $5.3 billion Jordan Cove LNG project.

Raymond James analyst Chris Cox said in a research note that FERC’s decision was “without prejudice,” meaning the company “may look to re-apply with the FERC following the new presidenti­al administra­tion taking ofce in the new year.”

Veresen had requested a re-hearing after FERC denied its applicatio­n for a permit in March, when the regulator said Veresen hadn’t demonstrat­ed there was a commercial need for the project because it had yet to ofcially sign customers in Asia to buy the gas from Canada and the U.S. Following that denial, Veresen announced it signed two major Japanese customers, JERA Co. Inc. and ITOCHU Corp., to offtake agreements by the middle of April, re-applied for FERC permits and asked for a re-hearing for the facility and attached Pacific Connector pipeline.

On Dec. 9, FERC released its decision not to re-hear Veresen’s applicatio­n and said the company has not demonstrat­ed there were “extraordin­ary circumstan­ces” proving the need for a re-hearing.

“We afforded Pacific Connector ample time — over 3.5 years — to demonstrat­e evidence of market demand,” FERC ofcials wrote in their decision, which criticized Veresen for not providing proof of customers earlier in the process.

“We are very disappoint­ed by FERC’s decision, especially in light of the significan­t progress that has been made in demonstrat­ing market support for the project and the strong showing of public support for the project,” Veresen president and CEO Don Althoff said in a release. The company declined a request for additional comment.

The release stated Veresen would “review all of its options in light of the FERC denial, including appeal or the submission of a new applicatio­n with FERC.”

AltaCorp Capital analyst Dirk Lever said in a research note the most recent FERC denial puts Veresen “back to square one,” and noted that a timeline for a sanctionin­g decision for the project is now “indetermin­able.”

Veresen spent US$100 million to advance the project over the course of 2016, but will scale back spending to US$30 million over the course of 2017. The company said it remains committed to the project.

 ?? CNW GROUP/VERESEN INC. ?? Calgary-based Veresen faced a setback on Friday when its applicatio­n was declined for a re-hearing on its $5.3 billion Jordan Cove LNG project.
CNW GROUP/VERESEN INC. Calgary-based Veresen faced a setback on Friday when its applicatio­n was declined for a re-hearing on its $5.3 billion Jordan Cove LNG project.

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