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Mainline contracting delayed, not dead, after regulator ruling: Enbridge

By CP STAFF   

Industry Energy Manufacturing Enbridge energy gas manufaturing oil

The pipeline system's current operating model, which makes space open to all bidders on a monthly basis, expires in June 2021.

CALGARY — Shares in Enbridge Inc. were down Sept. 30 after the Canada Energy Regulator ordered it to suspend an open season it was holding for service on its Canadian Mainline oil pipeline system.

Enbridge says the CER decision Sept. 27 after markets closed changes the timing, but it still intends to proceed with signing firm contracts with shippers on the system that moves about 70% of Canada’s crude exports into the US.

The pipeline system’s current operating model, which makes space open to all bidders on a monthly basis, expires in June 2021.

The regulator says it shut down the open season after reviewing submissions from more than 30 parties, including complaints from producers Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., Suncor Energy Inc. and Shell Canada Ltd. that the process was unfair.

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Analysts rate the CER decision as slightly negative for Enbridge because it means the Calgary-based company must now apply to the CER to approve the tolls, terms and conditions of the proposed service change before another open season can proceed.

In a report, analysts at Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. say that could mean it will have to settle for lower tolls than it expected.

“Friday’s decision by the CER is a departure from the decades of precedent and commercial practice in our industry,” Guy Jarvis, executive vice-president of liquids pipelines for Enbridge, said in a statement.

“Although the CER decision results in a change to the process of securing commercial support through an open season in advance of the regulatory application, it does not change our plans to respond to the desires of our customers for priority access to Mainline capacity, toll certainty and access to the best markets that contract carriage offers.”

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