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Providing coverage of Alaska and northern Canada's oil and gas industry
October 2017

Vol. 22, No. 42 Week of October 15, 2017

TransCanada says it’s canceling Energy East

Rob Gillies

Associated Press

Pipeline company TransCanada Oct. 5 said it's cancelling a plan to pipe 1.1 million barrels of oil per day from Western Canada to the Atlantic coast.

TransCanada Chief Executive Officer Russ Girling said in a statement that "after careful review of changed circumstances," it won't go ahead. Girling had previously called the pipeline a historic opportunity to connect the oil resources of Canada's west to eastern consumers. He'd noted the oil could be shipped to the U.S. Eastern Seaboard, Asia and Europe.

In a letter to the National Energy Board the Calgary, Alberta-based company on Thursday blamed "the existing and likely future delays resulting from the regulatory process, the associated cost implications and the increasingly challenging issues and obstacles" facing the project.

Alberta's oil sands growth has slowed with the decline in the price of oil and there was stiff environmental opposition in the French-speaking province of Quebec.

Supporters said the pipeline was necessary to decrease reliance on the U.S., which takes 97 percent of Canada's energy exports. Alberta has the world's third largest oil reserves, with 170 billion barrels of proven reserves.

The cancellation sparked celebration in Quebec and anger in Western Canada. Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre, who has opposed the pipeline on environmental grounds, said he was thrilled to see it abandoned. Calgary, Alberta Mayor Naheed Nenshi sarcastically said he loved the fact that Montreal's mayor was celebrating the loss of Canadian jobs.

Brad Wall, the premier of the Western Canadian province of Saskatchewan, called the Montreal mayor hypocritical and said he leads a city that just two years ago used a pipeline to dump 2,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools of raw sewage into the St. Lawrence Seaway. Wall also tore into Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

"His actions and his government's actions may well have some westerners wondering if this country really values western Canada, the resources we have, and the things we do to contribute to the national economy," Wall said in a statement.

Federal opposition deputy Conservative Lisa Raitt called it a terrible day for Canada and blamed Trudeau for not championing the nation-building project and the nation's energy sector. "Everything Justin Trudeau touches becomes a nightmare," Raitt said.

In Parliament in Ottawa Trudeau called TransCanada's decision a business decision and noted the market has changed from when it was first announced in 2013.

"When they first proposed the Energy East pipeline oil was up around $90 a barrel," Trudeau said. "Since then oil is at around half that price."





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