Edmonton Journal

Enbridge predicts small volume increase on Mainline network if TMX delays persist

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Enbridge Inc. could benefit from increased volumes on its Mainline oil pipeline network if the startup of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion is significan­tly delayed, the Calgary-based energy infrastruc­ture firm said Friday.

Enbridge, like the rest of Canada's energy sector, has been closely watching the latest developmen­ts with the Trans Mountain project. The high-profile pipeline expansion will increase Trans Mountain's capacity to a total of 890,000 barrels per day, creating new oil shipping competitio­n for Enbridge and its Mainline system, but the project has been marred by delays and constructi­on cost increases.

Most recently, Trans Mountain Corp. announced it has run into new constructi­on challenges in B.C. that will delay the pipeline's expected first-quarter startup until sometime in the second quarter of this year.

Colin Gruending, president of Enbridge's liquids pipelines business, said Friday the company has been assuming an April 1 in-service date for Trans Mountain. He said if that date is pushed back, Enbridge will likely see a small boost in shipping volumes.

“To the extent it (Trans Mountain) is delayed, that's a slight tailwind,” Gruending told a conference call to discuss Enbridge's fourth-quarter earnings.

“We believe we're going to be substantia­lly full anyway, so a slight delay doesn't provide a massive increase for us. But there is some upside to that.”

Enbridge's Mainline network is Canada's largest oil pipeline system, providing about 70 per cent of the total oil pipeline transporta­tion capacity out of Western Canada. Demand for shipping on the Mainline — which moves oil to markets in Eastern Canada and the U.S. Midwest — has exceeded capacity over the past few years. However, the network has long been expected to lose barrels to Trans Mountain once the expansion project comes online.

But Gruending said that picture has changed due to Trans Mountain's delays. The pipeline project was originally supposed to be finished in 2022, and the constructi­on delays have meant more time for Canadian oil producers to ramp up production in anticipati­on of the additional export capacity.

“I think this notion that the Mainline is going to lose a bunch of volume when (Trans Mountain) comes on is a bit of a stale concept.

It might have been valid a view years ago, but it's been delayed materially,” Gruending said.

“And in that multi-year period of delay, supply has structural­ly and permanentl­y grown. ... That demand is there. It's basically insatiable.”

Statistics Canada data show oil production in Alberta rose to a new record of 3.82 million barrels per day in 2023. In December alone, Alberta produced 4.19 million barrels per day, a 10 per cent yearover-year increase.

A report released in October by Deloitte Canada said Canadian oil production is expected to grow by about 375,000 barrels a day over the next two years, greater than the total amount added to Canada's production levels over the past five years combined.

Enbridge is forecastin­g its Mainline system will run essentiall­y at capacity for most of 2024, averaging three million barrels per day.

In December, Enbridge filed an applicatio­n with the Canada Energy Regulator for approval of its new tolling deal for the Mainline system. Tolls are the fees oil companies pay to ship their product on a pipeline, and are how pipeline operators make money.

Enbridge had been negotiatin­g a new tolling framework with its oil industry customers for a year-anda-half. Once finalized and approved by the regulator, the new tolling deal will be in place through 2028.

On Friday, Enbridge reported a profit of $1.73 billion or 81 cents per share in its fourth quarter compared with a loss a year earlier when it took a large non-cash goodwill impairment charge.

The result compared with a loss of $1.07 billion or 53 cents per share in the last three months of 2022 when the company took a $2.5-billion charge related to its gas transmissi­on business.

On an adjusted basis, Enbridge said it earned 64 cents per share in the quarter ended Dec. 31 compared with an adjusted profit of 63 cents per share a year earlier.

The company said last month it was cutting its workforce by 650 positions due to what it called “increasing­ly challengin­g business conditions” related to geopolitic­al instabilit­y, persistent inflation and rising interest rates.

Supply has structural­ly and permanentl­y grown. ... That demand is there. It's basically insatiable.

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