Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

TransCanada CEO says industry has lived through worse than latest crude downturn

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2014 10:22 AM

    CALGARY — The CEO of TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP) says he doesn't see the oil industry's appetite for new pipelines faltering even though crude prices have skidded recently to the lowest in more than five-years.

    In an interview in his downtown Calgary office, Russ Girling said he's seen ups and downs far more drastic over his career and expects the oilpatch will come out of the latest downturn in reasonably good shape.

    "There's a tremendous need to build irrespective of the price of the commodity right now," Girling said.

    "We're being pressed to get these facilities on line as quickly as we possibly can."

    U.S. benchmark crude has fallen by nearly half over the past six months, settling at US$56.47 a barrel on Wednesday. In recent weeks, there has been a bevy of announcements signalling that next year's activity in the oilpatch will be subdued.

    Girling said most in the industry would see an US$80 to US$100 per barrel oil price in the long run, given that demand will continue to grow.

    And he points out that when TransCanada first filed its application for Keystone XL in September 2008, it wasn't exactly a good time for the oilpatch, either. After hitting record highs during that summer, crude prices swiftly cratered below US$40 a barrel as the Great Recession took hold.

    "I'm not saying this is easy at all, but the business is resilient and the world is demanding more oil every day," said Girling

    Girling said anyone who believes that US$60 oil — even if it's for a year or two — is going to cause the oilsands to come to a screeching halt "hasn't been in this business very long."

    "So the notion that somehow as we hit this new low that this business is over in Canada, I think one only needs to look at the last 30 years of production to say that theory doesn't work."

    TransCanada has been waiting on a permit to build its Keystone XL pipeline for more than six years. The US$8-billion project would carry crude from Alberta and the U.S. Midwest to refineries near the Gulf Coast.

    Keystone XL would cut diagonally across Montana, South Dakota and Nebraska. The most recent hold-up has centred around a court case in Nebraska over who has the authority to approve the pipeline's route through the state.

    Opposition to Keystone XL has been focused on local concerns, such as a potential spill's impact on a key aquifer, as well as on broader issues, such as the pipeline's role in enabling oilsands growth the resulting increase in greenhouse gas emissions.

    Because the pipeline would cross the Canada-U.S. border, it requires presidential approval. So far, President Barack Obama has declined to make a decision.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    TSB report says 'unprecedented' flood at root of Calgary bridge failure

    TSB report says 'unprecedented' flood at root of Calgary bridge failure
    CALGARY — The Transportation Safety Board says unprecedented flood water was to blame for a derailment and partial bridge collapse in Calgary last year.

    TSB report says 'unprecedented' flood at root of Calgary bridge failure

    Alberta cabinet minister says he has 'open mind' on Wildrose floor-crossers

    Alberta cabinet minister says he has 'open mind' on Wildrose floor-crossers
    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Jim Prentice's caucus is discussing a bid by as many as seven official Opposition members to cross the floor — and at least one cabinet minister says he's keeping an "open mind."

    Alberta cabinet minister says he has 'open mind' on Wildrose floor-crossers

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Of Contentious $8.8 Billion Site C Dam On The Peace River

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Of Contentious $8.8 Billion Site C Dam On The Peace River
    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government has approved its most expensive mega project with the construction of an $8.8 billion dam on the Peace River that Premier Christy Clark says marks a historic milestone that will be felt for a century.

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Of Contentious $8.8 Billion Site C Dam On The Peace River

    B.C. Court Convicts Alleged Hells Angel Of Extortion And Theft Over $5,000

    B.C. Court Convicts Alleged Hells Angel Of Extortion And Theft Over $5,000
    Neil MacKenzie of B.C.'s Criminal Justice Branch says the case against Robert Widdifield went to trial in the fall and a decision was handed down in Nanaimo, B.C., on Tuesday.

    B.C. Court Convicts Alleged Hells Angel Of Extortion And Theft Over $5,000

    Ontario man charged in alleged US$70m scheme after arriving at Pearson airport

    Ontario man charged in alleged US$70m scheme after arriving at Pearson airport
    HUNTSVILLE, Ont. — An Ontario man charged by American authorities four years ago in an alleged US$70 million Ponzi scheme has been arrested after arriving at Toronto's Pearson International airport.

    Ontario man charged in alleged US$70m scheme after arriving at Pearson airport

    Woman pleads guilty to spiriting away sheep from quarantined Ontario farm

    Woman pleads guilty to spiriting away sheep from quarantined Ontario farm
    PETERBOROUGH, Ont. — One of four people charged in the disappearance of 31 rare sheep east of Toronto has been convicted of transporting an animal under quarantine.

    Woman pleads guilty to spiriting away sheep from quarantined Ontario farm